14

Is there any way to start the/a Ruby debugger whenever the code throws an exception, without me wrapping the code like this:

begin
  #do something
rescue
  debugger
end

I'd like to have it in such a way that if the do something part raises an exception, the debugger will start. It would be nice not having to modify the code to add begin rescue blocks all over.

6 Answers 6

6

Hammertime!

2
  • Hammertime (modeled after the Squeak exception behaviour) does exactly what you want.
    – severin
    Feb 25, 2010 at 8:40
  • Yeah, but hammertime doesn't start if native code throws an exception.
    – Geo
    Feb 25, 2010 at 19:11
5

I stumbled across this page:post-mortem debugging. Doing this:

Debugger.start(:post_mortem => true)

gets me where I want to.

2
  • this seemed to work for me previously, but recently no joy with gem 'debugger' :-(
    – Sam Joseph
    Mar 20, 2014 at 6:12
  • @SamJoseph did you find a way to do this with the debugger fork of the ruby-debug gem?
    – Sherwin Yu
    Mar 27, 2014 at 19:51
3
require 'ruby-debug'
class Exception
  alias original_initalize initialize
  def initialize(*args)
    original_initalize(*args)
    debugger
  end
end

This will run the original exception as well as call debugger

2

In RubyMine 2.0.x go to Run -> View Breakpoints and click "Ruby Exception Breakpoints" tab, then add the type of the exception you are interested in...

There should be something similar in NetBeans and other Ruby IDEs i guess.

BTW, RubyMine is the BEST!

2

if you're using ruby-debug (and it looks like you are), you can set catchPoints for the exception you want.

 (rdbg) catch Exception

for example

1

I recommend using gem debug, and if using VScode extension "VSCode rdbg Ruby Debugger", and setting env variable RUBY_DEBUG_POSTMORTEM to true.

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