I have a utility class that has been thoroughly tested, and I do not want the VS debugger to step into any of its methods. I think I have heard of a way to mark something as not my code so that the Just My Code debugger setting causes the debugger to step over these method calls, but for the life of me I cannot recall what the class attribute is (nor can I successfully Google for it).

I know that I could separate this class into its own assembly and build it in release mode to alleviate the issue, but I would like to step into some of the assembly (and I would like to keep this class where it is).

Is this possible, or was I dreaming up this option?

Update

I did some testing with the two options (DebuggerStepThrough and DebuggerNonUserCode), and I found that DebuggerNonUserCode behaves exactly the same as the framework when having Just My Code enabled / disabled. The DebuggerStepThrough attribute always causes the debugger to skip the section marked with the attribute. For consistency's sake, I went with DebuggerNonUserCode.

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Press F10 to step over a method. Problem solved. – Ed S. Feb 9 '11 at 22:16
@Ed: I know this, but I would rather not have to switch between F10 and F11 as I am debugging (unless I specifically want to). I would like the same behavior as I get with the framework when Just My Code is on. – Mark Avenius Feb 9 '11 at 22:17
@Ed: What a useless comment of yours. Consider A(B()). You want to step into A but not B. How? So much for your “problem solved”. Once you have A(B(), C(), D(), E()) it can get really tiresome. – Timwi Feb 9 '11 at 23:28
Yeah, that's a fair point. However, I left it as a comment (as opposed to an answer) for just that reason. – Ed S. Feb 9 '11 at 23:29
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2 Answers

up vote 2 down vote accepted

You are looking for the DebuggerNonUserCode attribute.

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You can use the DebuggerStepThrough attribute to skip over it.

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this is exactly what I was looking for. Thank you. – Mark Avenius Feb 9 '11 at 22:18
I thought DebuggerStepThrough is for methods only. – jdv-Jan de Vaan Feb 9 '11 at 22:20
@jdv, not that I know of. It should work on classes as well. – Brandon Feb 9 '11 at 22:26
@Jan: If you look at the AttributeUsage flags, it applies to Class, Struct, Constructor and Method. DebuggerNonUserCode includes Property as well. – Jeff Mercado Feb 9 '11 at 22:26
Jeff: Yeah, it looks like you're right. I was misreading the Msdn docs. – jdv-Jan de Vaan Feb 9 '11 at 22:56
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