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I'm trying to debug a module "main", which calls a function "broken_function" at line 356 of "another_module". I'm having an error in that function and want to put a breakpoint at its start. Below is the listing. Am I doing something wrong? Cause, the breakpoint doesn't work:

$ python -m pdb main
(Pdb) import sys
(Pdb) sys.path.append("/home/user/path/to/another/module")
(Pdb) import another_module
(Pdb) b another_module:356
Breakpoint 1 at /home/user/path/to/another/module/another_module.py:356
(Pdb) c
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
File "/home/user/path/to/another/module/another_module.py", line 383, in broken_function
f=open("../jobs/temptree.tre", "r")
IOError: [Errno 2] No such file or directory: '../jobs/temptree.tre'
Uncaught exception. Entering post mortem debugging
...
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1 Answer

up vote 2 down vote accepted

You are setting the breakpoint correctly. I imagine it is not stopping because the line of code you are breaking on is not called. Put the break on line 383.

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btw, you can also try a hard breakpoint to make sure. On line 383 insert "import pdb;pdb.set_trace()" – Riaz Rizvi Nov 27 '12 at 18:01
Good point, thanks! Will try now. – Bob Nov 27 '12 at 18:02
Your advice works perfectly, but pdb's behaviour looks odd to me. The line 356 is the first line of the function "def broken_function():". If I put the breakpoint at the next line, where comment resides, pdb says "*** Blank or comment", which means that the numeration of lines isn't broken. Breakpoints within the function work properly. Strange... Thanks for your solution! – Bob Nov 27 '12 at 18:17
That's normal behavior. You can only suspend a line of code. Empty lines and comment lines are not executed by the Python interpreter, so you can't ask the interpreter to break before it runs them. – Riaz Rizvi Nov 27 '12 at 18:44
But it seems, that when debugger executes the function it doesn't step on its definition line at all (I've checked it on a separate example). Gawd, am I going to have a day of python programming without dis.dis()? :) – Bob Nov 27 '12 at 19:12
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