This is a question I have wondered about for quite some time, yet I have never found a suitable solution. If I run a script and I come across, let's say an IndexError, python prints the line, location and quick description of the error and exits. Is it possible to automatically start pdb when an error is encountered? I am not against having an extra import statement at the top of the file, nor a few extra lines of code.
15 Answers
python -m pdb -c continue myscript.py
# or
python -m pdb -c continue -m myscript
If you don't provide the -c continue
flag then you'll need to enter 'c' (for Continue) when execution begins. Then it will run to the error point and give you control there. As mentioned by eqzx, this flag is a new addition in python 3.2 so entering 'c' is required for earlier Python versions (see https://docs.python.org/3/library/pdb.html).
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10Thanks for mentioning the "enter 'c'" - I typically used to enter 'r' (for "run"), being used to it from
gdb
; and when you enter 'r' inpdb
, program does indeed run, but does NOT stop (nor generate backtrace) on error; had me puzzled until I read this. Cheers!– sdaauAug 2, 2013 at 20:58 -
4I tried your method. But it doesn't seem to offer any real control like inspecting variables at the the time of error. The only option it seems to offer is to restart execution. Dec 7, 2014 at 2:44
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67Please OP, accept this as an answer. This is the most useful and I have wasted 5 minutes reading the other ones until I hit this one... this should be first !– jhegedusSep 17, 2015 at 19:46
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5This also works the same with
ipdb
; and of course arguments can be added after the script! Dec 14, 2015 at 10:03 -
22This doesn't work with Python 2.7. docs.python.org/3/library/pdb.html : "New in version 3.2: pdb.py now accepts a -c option that executes commands"– eqzxApr 10, 2017 at 18:29
You can use traceback.print_exc to print the exceptions traceback. Then use sys.exc_info to extract the traceback and finally call pdb.post_mortem with that traceback
import pdb, traceback, sys
def bombs():
a = []
print a[0]
if __name__ == '__main__':
try:
bombs()
except:
extype, value, tb = sys.exc_info()
traceback.print_exc()
pdb.post_mortem(tb)
If you want to start an interactive command line with code.interact using the locals of the frame where the exception originated you can do
import traceback, sys, code
def bombs():
a = []
print a[0]
if __name__ == '__main__':
try:
bombs()
except:
type, value, tb = sys.exc_info()
traceback.print_exc()
last_frame = lambda tb=tb: last_frame(tb.tb_next) if tb.tb_next else tb
frame = last_frame().tb_frame
ns = dict(frame.f_globals)
ns.update(frame.f_locals)
code.interact(local=ns)
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4why would anyone prefer
code
overpdb
since the latter seems to expand on the former?– K3---rncAug 25, 2014 at 21:49 -
5Then use
sys.exc_info
to extract the traceback and finally callpdb.post_mortem
with that traceback. You don't need to pass traceback object topdb.post_mortem
. From docs: If no traceback is given, it uses the one of the exception that is currently being handled (an exception must be being handled if the default is to be used). Apr 21, 2015 at 8:13 -
2@PiotrDobrogost Good point. I think it's more helpful to know that you can pass a tb object in, though, as it better demonstrates the API. Good to know both options exist.– davidADec 18, 2016 at 23:35
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1Regarding "why would you prefer code over pdb on the command line?" -- there are contexts where the interpreter is launched from within a process that doesn't allow you to launch the debugger as a wrapper... e.g. when the interpreter is just part of a larger application or some framework is managing a complex environment surrounding the interpreter. In such cases, doing a stub launcher like this makes sense. Oct 30, 2019 at 18:45
Use the following module:
import sys
def info(type, value, tb):
if hasattr(sys, 'ps1') or not sys.stderr.isatty():
# we are in interactive mode or we don't have a tty-like
# device, so we call the default hook
sys.__excepthook__(type, value, tb)
else:
import traceback, pdb
# we are NOT in interactive mode, print the exception...
traceback.print_exception(type, value, tb)
print
# ...then start the debugger in post-mortem mode.
# pdb.pm() # deprecated
pdb.post_mortem(tb) # more "modern"
sys.excepthook = info
Name it debug
(or whatever you like) and put it somewhere in your python path.
Now, at the start of your script, just add an import debug
.
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4This should be the accepted answer -- it doesn't require any modification of existing code or wrapping everything in a
try-catch
which is just ugly IMO.– cypharSep 7, 2015 at 15:01 -
1This looks great, but note that some frameworks (e.g. flask) already set
sys.excepthook
. They often have their own even better approaches like werkzeug, but see also python - Flask and sys\.excepthook - Stack Overflow– nealmcbNov 6, 2020 at 2:11
Ipython has a command for toggling this behavior: %pdb. It does exactly what you described, maybe even a bit more (giving you more informative backtraces with syntax highlighting and code completion). It's definitely worth a try!
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6
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7
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8Note that -- as also noted in the docs @matthiash linked --
%debug
allows one to open the debugger after encountering an error. I often prefer this over%pdb
. (The trade-off is merely typingq
every time you don't want to debug an error vs. typing%debug
every time you do want to debug an error.) Oct 29, 2017 at 21:12 -
3Note also that setting
c.InteractiveShell.pdb = True
in one'sipython_config.py
turns on%pdb
automatically for every session. Oct 29, 2017 at 21:17
This isn't the debugger, but probably just as useful(?)
I know I heard Guido mention this in a speech somewhere.
I just checked python -?, and if you use the -i command you can interact where your script stopped.
So given this script:
testlist = [1,2,3,4,5, 0]
prev_i = None
for i in testlist:
if not prev_i:
prev_i = i
else:
result = prev_i/i
You can get this output!
PS D:\> python -i debugtest.py
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "debugtest.py", line 10, in <module>
result = prev_i/i
ZeroDivisionError: integer division or modulo by zero
>>>
>>>
>>> prev_i
1
>>> i
0
>>>
To be honest I haven't used this, but I should be, seems very useful.
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10Not nearly as useful, launches into global scope. Can't poke around in whatever function crashed.– pixelpaxMar 26, 2016 at 20:37
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how could this be made so it only goes into 'debug' if there was an error. Aug 27, 2020 at 14:53
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IPython makes this simple on the command line:
python myscript.py arg1 arg2
can be rewritten to
ipython --pdb myscript.py -- arg1 arg2
Or, similarly, if calling a module:
python -m mymodule arg1 arg2
can be rewritten to
ipython --pdb -m mymodule -- arg1 arg2
Note the --
to stop IPython from reading the script's arguments as its own.
This also has the advantage of invoking the enhanced IPython debugger (ipdb) instead of pdb.
If you are using the IPython environment, you can just use the %debug and the shell will take you back to the offending line with the ipdb environment for inspections etc. Another option as pointed above is to use the iPython magic %pdb which effectively does the same.
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Note that if the error occurred in a module function, you can navigate through the frames with
up
anddown
commands to go back to the line of your code that generated the error. Jan 23, 2019 at 10:23
To have it run without having to type c at the beginning use:
python -m pdb -c c <script name>
Pdb has its own command line arguments: -c c will execute c(ontinue) command at start of execution and the program will run uninterrupted until the error.
If you are running a module:
python -m mymodule
And now you want to enter pdb
when an exception occurs, do this:
PYTHONPATH="." python -m pdb -c c mymodule/__main__.py
(or extend your PYTHONPATH
). The PYTHONPATH
is needed so that the module is found in the path, since you are running the pdb
module now.
python -m pdb script.py in python2.7 press continue to start and it will run to the error and break there for debug.
ipdb
has a nice context manager to achieve this behavior which makes the intent semantically clearer:
from ipdb import launch_ipdb_on_exception
with launch_ipdb_on_exception():
...
You can put this line in your code:
import pdb ; pdb.set_trace()
More info: Start the python debugger at any line
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12This stops the code and starts a debugger in the line where you put this command, not on the line where an exception occurred– blueFastFeb 18, 2016 at 17:53
Put a breakpoint inside the constructor of topmost exception class in the hierarchy, and most of the times you will see where the error was raised.
Putting a breakpoint means whatever you want it to mean : you can use an IDE, or pdb.set_trace
, or whatever
If you happen to be using pudb (python debugger with a nice interface), you can enter debugger when an exception occurs with:
python -m pudb -c code_that_crashes.py
pudb describes the -c
option as:
-c, --continue Let the script run until an exception occurs or a breakpoint is hit
Since 3.7, you can use the keyword breakpoint directly in your code (without any import), just like this:
try:
... # The line that raises an error
except:
breakpoint()
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Doesn't answer the question. OP don't want to explicitly add the
breakpoint
everywhere in the code. No matter from which part of code, the exception is raised, OP wants to enter into debugger mode.– KrishnaNov 24, 2023 at 15:38
IPython
, it's much simpler.ipython --pdb myscript.py
python -m pdb -c cont myscript.py
(Elaborated in one of the answers below).ipdb
,python -m ipdb -c cont myscript.py