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UPDATE: Michal Sznajderhas has given a really "best" answer and also made it a community wiki.Really deserves lots of up votes.

Interview question-

Often its pretty easier to debug a program once you have trouble with your code.You can put watches,breakpoints and etc.Life is much easier because of debugger.

But how to debug a program without a debugger?

One possible approach which I know is simply putting print statements in your code wherever you want to check for the problems.

Are there any other approaches other than this?

As its a general question, its not restricted to any specific language.So please share your thoughts on how you would have done it?

EDIT- While submitting your answer, please mention a useful resource (if you have any) about any concept. e.g. Logging
This will be lot helpful for those who don't know about it at all.(This includes me, in some cases :-)

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Community wiki please! – thephpdeveloper Oct 20 at 4:38
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Not really a community question.Sorry Moris. – Ravi Oct 20 at 4:46
It should be CW cause it's subjective. – docgnome Oct 20 at 4:55
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Not subjective at all. It's not about best way. It's just about what are possible ways. – Michal Sznajder Oct 20 at 5:38
Thanks for support Michal. :) – Ravi Oct 20 at 10:09
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14 Answers

vote up 23 vote down check

Actually you have quite a lot of possibilities. Either with recompilation of source code or without.

With recompilation.

  • Additional logging. Either into program's logs or using system logging (eg. OutputDebugString or Events Log on Windows). Also use following steps:
    • Always include timestamp at least up to seconds resolution.
    • Consider adding thread-id in case of multithreaded apps.
    • Add some nice output of your structures
    • Do not print out enums with just %d. Use some ToString() or create some EnumToString() function (whatever suits your language)
    • ... and beware: logging changes timings so in case of heavily multithreading you problems might disappear.
    • More details on this here.
  • Introduce more asserts
  • Unit tests
  • "Audio-visual" monitoring: if something happens do one of
    • use buzzer
    • play system sound
    • flash some LED by enabling hardware GPIO line (only in embedded scenarios)

Without recompilation

  • If your application uses network of any kind: Packet Sniffer or I will just choose for you: Wireshark
  • If you use database: monitor queries send to database and database itself
  • Use some kind of system calls monitor. This includes
  • [Real hardcore] Hardware monitoring: use oscilloscope (aka O-Scope) to monitor signals on hardware lines
  • Source code debugging: you sit down with your source code and just pretend with piece of paper and pencil that you are computer. Its so called code analysis or "on-my-eyes" debugging
  • Source control debugging. Compare diffs of your code from time when "it" works and now. Bug might be somewhere there.

And some general tips in the end:

  • Do not forget about Text to Collumns and Pivot Table in Excel. Together with some text tools (awk, grep or perl) give you incredible analysis pack. If you have more than 32K records consider using Access as data source.
  • Basics of Data Warehousing might help. With simple cube you may analyse tons of temporal data in just few minutes.
  • Dumping your application is worth mentioning. Either as a result of crash or just on regular basis
  • Always generate you debug symbols (even for release builds).
  • Almost last but not least: most mayor platforms has some sort of command line debugger always built in (even Windows!). With some tricks like conditional debugging and break-print-continue you can get pretty good result with obscure bugs
  • And really last but not least: use your brain and question everything.

In general debugging is like science: you do not create it you discover it. Quite often its like looking for a murderer in a criminal case. So buy yourself a hat and never give up.

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You might want to add to hardware monitoring that you can use a O-Scope to watch GPIO lines to measure execution time and frequency of execution of functions. – tkryger Oct 20 at 5:10
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You can also toggle GPIO lines just for debugging. It's like adding a print statement for non-embedded code. – starblue Oct 20 at 6:50
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Best answer..I wish I could vote you up more than once. Thanks for efforts. – Ravi Oct 29 at 2:44
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Now keep counting your upvotes... :) – Ravi Oct 31 at 9:57
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No..You are great... – Ravi Nov 3 at 9:58
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vote up 4 vote down

Just a couple suggestions:

1) Asserts. This should help you work out general expectations at different states of the program. As well familiarize yourself with the code

2) Unit tests. I have used these at times to dig into new code and test out APIs

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vote up 3 vote down

First of all, what does debugging actually do? Advanced debuggers give you machine hooks to suspend execution, examine variables and potentially modify state of a running program. Most programs don't need all that to debug them. There are many approaches:

  1. Tracing: implement some kind of logging mechanism, or use an existing one such as dtrace(). It usually worth it to implement some kind of printf-like function that can output generally formatted output into a system log. Then just throw state from key points in your program to this log. Believe it or not, in complex programs, this can be more useful than raw debugging with a real debugger. Logs help you know how you got into trouble, while a debugger that traps on a crash assumes you can reverse engineer how you got there from whatever state you are already in. For applications that you use other complex libraries that you don't own that crash in the middle of them, logs are often far more useful. But it requires a certain amount of discipline in writing your log messages.

  2. Program/Library self-awareness: To solve very specific crash events, I often have implemented wrappers on system libraries such as malloc/free/realloc which extensions that can do things like walk memory, detect double frees, attempts to free non-allocated pointers, check for obvious buffer over-runs etc. Often you can do this sort of thing for your important internal data types as well -- typically you can make self-integrity checks for things like linked lists (they can't loop, and they can't point into la-la land.) Even for things like OS synchronization objects, often you only need to know which thread, or what file and line number (capturable by __FILE__, __LINE__) the last user of the synch object was to help you work out a race condition.

  3. If you are insane like me, you could, in fact, implement your own mini-debugger inside of your own program. This is really only an option in a self-reflective programming language, or in languages like C with certain OS-hooks. When compiling C/C++ in Windows/DOS you can implement a "crash-hook" callback which is executed when any program fault is triggered. When you compile your program you can build a .map file to figure out what the relative addresses of all your public functions (so you can work out the loader initial offset by subtracting the address of main() from the address given in your .map file). So when a crash happens (even pressing ^C during a run, for example, so you can find your infinite loops) you can take the stack pointer and scan it for offsets within return addresses. You can usually look at your registers, and implement a simple console to let you examine all this. And voila, you have half of a real debugger implemented. Keep this going and you can reproduce the VxWorks' console debugging mechanism.

  4. Another approach, is logical deduction. This is related to #1. Basically any crash or anomalous behavior in a program occurs when it stops behaving as expected. You need to have some feed back method of knowing when the program is behaving normally then abnormally. Your goal then is to find the exact conditions upon which your program goes from behaving correctly to incorrectly. With printf()/logs, or other feedback (such as enabling a device in an embedded system -- the PC has a speaker, but some motherboards also have a digital display for BIOS stage reporting; embedded systems will often have a COM port that you can use) you can deduce at least binary states of good and bad behavior with respect to the run state of your program through the instrumentation of your program.

  5. A related method is logical deduction with respect to code versions. Often a program was working perfectly at one state, but some later version is not longer working. If you use good source control, and you enforce a "top of tree must always be working" philosophy amongst your programming team, then you can use a binary search to find the exact version of the code at which the failure occurs. You can use diffs then to deduce what code change exposes the error. If the diff is too large, then you have the task of trying to redo that code change in smaller steps where you can apply binary searching more effectively.

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vote up 2 vote down

I guess you just have to write fine-grain unit tests.

I also like to write a pretty-printer for my data structures.

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vote up 2 vote down

One word: Logging.

Your program should write descriptive debug lines which include a timestamp to a log file based on a configurable debug level. Reading the resultant log files gives you information on what happened during the execution of the program. There are logging packages in every common programming language that make this a snap:

Java: log4j

.Net: NLog or log4net

Python: Python Logging

PHP: Pear Logging Framework

Ruby: Ruby Logger

C: log4c

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What is this? I don't understand. – Ravi Oct 20 at 4:37
+1 agreement.. @Ravi - do logging. enough said. – thephpdeveloper Oct 20 at 4:39
Thanks.Now its really helpful. – Ravi Oct 20 at 10:21
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On *nix systems, strace and/or dtrace can tell you an awful lot about the execution of your program and the libraries it uses.

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I think the rest of the interview might go something like this...

Candidate: So you don't buy debuggers for your developers?
Interviewer: No, they have debuggers.

Candidate: So you are looking for programmers who, out of masochism or chest thumping hamartia, make things complicated on themselves even if they would be less productive?
Interviewer: No, I'm just trying to see if you know what you would do in a situation that will never happen.

Candidate: I suppose I'd add logging or print statements. Can I ask you a similar question?
Interviewer: Sure.

Candidate: How would you recruit a team of developers if you didn't have any appreciable interviewing skill to distinguish good prospects based on relevant information?

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Lol. :) Seriously though, there are real situations where implementing your own debugging mechanisms makes some sort of sense. (Embedded systems for which such tools have not yet been made.) – Paul Hsieh Oct 20 at 5:30
Actually it quite valid question: in case of some hardware issues or obscure multithreading adding more logs might cause more damage than real help... – Michal Sznajder Oct 20 at 5:35
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Always using a debugger leads to a undesirable mindset of just stepping through code continuously until you see something. A debugger should only be used once you understand the problem and know where the problem lies. Some code (interaction between threads) is very hard to debug. – Gerhard Oct 20 at 5:40
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Just going on the wording of the question as presented "But how can you debug a program without a debugger?" If the question was "What types of problems can't be debugged with the debugger in the IDE, and how would you debug those, I'd agree." The way it is worded, stinks too much of the "Tell me what I'm thinking..." interview tactic. – JohnFx Oct 20 at 5:53
nah. tricky interview questions filter out the weak and unconfident. if you don't know or can't think of a way to solve something because "it never comes up", these kind of questions will elevate those that still consider how "it all works". a lot of programmers cling to their VM-based HLL and lose sight of how their language is implemented on top of the operating system. if they're not thinking about it, or knowledgeable about the abstraction they're using, they should be. – Anacrolix Oct 25 at 17:46
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Peer review. You have been looking at the code for 8 hours and your brain is just showing you what you want to see in the code. A fresh pair of eyes can make all the difference.

Version control. Especially for large teams. If somebody changed something you rely on but did not tell you it is easy to find a specific change set that caused your trouble by rolling the changes back one by one.

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vote up 0 vote down
  • use println/log in code
  • use DB explorer to look at data in DB/files
  • write tests and put asserts in suspicious places
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More generally, you can monitor side effects and output of the program, and trigger certain events in the program externally.

A Print statement isn't always appropriate. You might use other forms of output such as writing to the Event Log or a log file, writing to a TCP socket (I have a nice utility that can listen for that type of trace from my program), etc.

For programs that don't have a UI, you can trigger behavior you want to debug by using an external flag such as the existence of a file. You might have the program wait for the file to be created, then run through a behavior you're interested in while logging relevant events.

Another file's existence might trigger the program's internal state to be written to your logging mechanism.

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vote up 0 vote down

like everyone else said:

  • Logging
  • Asserts
  • Extra Output

&

your favorite task manager or process explorer

links here and here

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Another thing I have not seen mentioned here that I have had to use quite a bit on embedded systems is serial terminals.

You can cannot a serial terminal to just about any type of device on the planet (I have even done it to embedded CPUs for hydraulics, generators, etc). Then you can write out to the serial port and see everything on the terminal.

You can get real fancy and even setup a thread that listens to the serial terminal and responds to commands. I have done this as well and implemented simple commands to dump a list, see internal variables, etc all from a simple 9600 baud RS-232 serial port!

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Spy++ (and more recently Snoop for WPF) are tremendous for getting an insight into Windows UI bugs.

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Binary search in time is also a method: If you have your source code stored in a version-control repository, and you know that version 100 worked, but version 200 doesn't, try to see if version 150 works. If it does, the error must be between version 150 and 200, so find version 175 and see if it works... etc.

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