While debugging is there anyway to see a complete stack trace (i.e., a list of methods called in the main thread) on the command window?
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1possible duplicate of Objective C - getting line number or full stack trace from debugger error?– Mike WellerApr 11, 2013 at 10:40
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Programmatically, you can use callStackSymbols as Mihir describes. But of course you can also stop in Xcode, at a breakpoint (or just pressing "pause") and examine the stack in the left-hand column. (Always enable an exception breakpoint.)– Hot LicksApr 11, 2013 at 10:47
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2(+1 for realizing that examining the stack is important. Far too few folks starting out on Xcode appreciate this.)– Hot LicksApr 11, 2013 at 10:49
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I am doing same, but in stack trace I can see just 5 or 6 method calls and after that on 25 its UIApplicationMain and on 26 its main. I can't see the methods between 6 and 25. I want to see complete stack trace.– NaXirApr 11, 2013 at 11:00
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1I got it via nslog. thanks guys– NaXirApr 11, 2013 at 11:05
5 Answers
Use the bt
command in (lldb).
Once paused or after a crash, just type bt
into the debug console.
It will print the full stack trace.
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Awesome tip for tracking down a constraint issue after setting the symbolic breakpoint. Feb 22, 2020 at 0:12
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1You can also mention the thread id (from the debug pane) for capturing stack of that particular thread. For example, in case of Thread 42, you'd do - "bt 42" May 8, 2020 at 22:25
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You can print the stack trace in the NSLog by
NSLog(@"Stack trace : %@",[NSThread callStackSymbols]);
Upon a crash, next to the word (lldb)
, you can type:
po [NSThread callStackSymbols]
Edit:
For better output on console on Swift you can use following line instead:
Thread.callStackSymbols.forEach{print($0)}
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11within lldb it can be printed with: po [NSThread callStackSymbols] Apr 23, 2014 at 8:32
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In Xcode 6 you can click the button at the bottom left corner of the pane which shows the full stack trace.
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1This answer is still current in Xcode 11, but the button has been moved slightly. ;) May 15, 2020 at 15:14
In Xcode 5 you can move the slider at the bottom of the pane which shows the stack trace. It controls how much of the struck trace is shown.
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6
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3This slider appears to have been removed in XCode6... if anyone knows how to do this under XCode6 you would be my hero.– SteazyOct 21, 2014 at 18:07
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@Steazy See Gong Pengjun's answer for Xcode 6-11 (or possibly later, 11.x is current at this moment) May 16, 2020 at 0:51
You can add breakpoint
before exception is thrown. First go to Breakpoint Navigator
(cmd + 6). In the bottom left corner mouse click plus button. OR
You can use Instruments
(/Developer/Applications/Instruments) to help detect usage of zombie
objects
.
Reference
And When you add breakpoint review the picture will create by Xcode
.
You can expand the stack trace using the slider at bottom use step over
and over
for line by line logs.
thanks hope this will help you