It depends on your target platform. For example, if you're implementing your DSL compiler on top of .NET, it is trivial to annotate your bytecode with debugging information (variable names, source code location for expressions and statements, etc.).
If you also provide a Visual Studio extension for your language, you'll be able to reuse a royalty-free MSVS Isolated Shell for both editing and debugging for your DSL code.
Nearly the same approach is possible with JVM (you can use Eclipse or Netbeans as a debugging frontend).
Native code generation is a little bit more complicated, but it is still possible to do some simple things, like generating C code stuffed with line pragmas.