What you need is in the Tools menu: Attach to Process. This gives you a list of running processes and allows you to attach your debugger to those processes. For local debugging, Transport and Qualifier should keep their default values. The Attach To value just above the list determines which type of debugging you'll be doing (native or managed are the most common types), and normally the debugger can figure out a good default here as well. The main interesting part is the list of processes - look in this list for the sub-processes you want to debug. Once you've found and selected the process, click Attach in the lower right corner (or just double-click the process), and the debugger will attach to that process and start debugging it. You'll probably also want to enable the Debug Location toolbar, which provides a way to change the focus of the debugger to the various processes and threads you're attached to. Multi-process debugging within one Visual Studio instance can be tricky, so you can always consider starting separate instances to debug each different process.