I use 'forever' to run my application. I want to attach to the running environment to inspect my application. So what can I do?
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= = not really. I just know about three commands: 1.forever start my_script.js; 2.forever list// list all running node processes; 3.forever stop my_pid //you can find the pid by running 'forever list'; And enough for me -,- . If necessary, I will go to Google for help, that's my style ^ ^– CroplioOct 25, 2012 at 9:38
7 Answers
From http://nodejs.org/api/debugger.html:
Advanced Usage
The V8 debugger can be enabled and accessed either by starting Node with the --debug command-line flag or by signaling an existing Node process with SIGUSR1.
Find the PID of your node
process and then sending SIGUSR1
should do the trick:
kill -s SIGUSR1 nodejs-pid
Then run node-inspector
and browse to the URL it indicates. More in this tutorial.
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I tried : $ node debug my_script.js, But the script must run by steps manually. What I need is to run it as normal and attach it to the already running process and test it with a interactive console. But really appreciate your help ^ ^– CroplioOct 25, 2012 at 9:31
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1@Croplio, It is
node --debug my_script.js
, with--debug
, notdebug
(note the two hyphens)– greuzeApr 18, 2017 at 14:17 -
1
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Starting from Node 6.3, node has a built-in debugger that can be triggered (even in a production app) by doing:
kill -USR1 <node-pid>
The node process will spit out something like this:
Debugger listening on ws://127.0.0.1:9229/f3f6f226-7dbc-4009-95fa-d516ba132fbd
For help see https://nodejs.org/en/docs/inspector
- If you can access the server from a browser, you can use
chrome://inspect
onhttp://host.domain:9229
. If you cannot connect via a browser (e.g. the server is in a firewalled production cluster), you can activate a REPL to inspect over the command line:
node inspect -p <node-pid>
- If you can't access the server from a browser, but you can SSH into that server, then setup SSH port forwarding (
ssh -nNTL 9229:localhost:9229 <username>@<your_host> -i <keyfile>.pem
) and you'll find your script underchrome://inspect
after a few seconds.
Prior to this version, node-inspector
was a separate tool for debugging Node processes. However, as documented on its own page, it is mostly deprecated as the now-bundled debugger is actively maintained and provides more advanced features. For more information on this change, see this thread.
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Looks promising, but I tried this on Node v10.15.2 (Debian), it seemingly did nothing and I just got a new prompt– mehovMay 7 at 11:51
Windows users
/edit 2022
This is what I use currently, configured in settings.json. This will prompt you to select a process and it will send the debug signal to it automatically. Read more below to understand what's happening.
"launch": {
"version": "0.2.0",
"configurations": [
{
"name": "Attach to Process (Pick)",
"type": "node",
"request": "attach",
"processId": "${command:PickProcess}",
"port": 9229,
}
]
},
Previously
If you are on Windows that doesn't support POSIX signals, you can use this workaround from another cmd
.
node -e "process._debugProcess(PID)"
For a detailed guide, or to set up debugging in VSCode, follow these simple steps:
- In VSCode, open
launch.json
configuration or create new by clicking on the wheel
(this is the debug view CtrlShiftD)
- The node will listen on port 9229 by default, so add this configuration:
{
"type": "node",
"request": "attach",
"name": "Attach to 9229",
"port": 9229
},
- Open Task Manager and locate the PID of your node process
I could identify my by the"build"
folder where theindex.js
is. - open another
cmd
orgit-bash
and run this command,
where21392
is the PID of your process.
node -e "process._debugProcess(21392)"
Everything should be ready now.
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PS: This is how to run VSCode in WSL mode and connect to a linux process. code.visualstudio.com/docs/remote/wsl– QwertyJan 13 at 17:48
For me, running node version 6.9.10 I had to:
kill -USR1 <node-pid>
then
node debug -p <node-pid>
the node inspect -p <node-pid>
command failed for this version of node.
You can add a REPL to your app. For example, if you add a REPL to listen on localhost port 5001, you start your app as usual and login with telnet: telnet localhost 5001
. That will take you to a prompt where you can interact with your app directly.
Alternatively, if you need to your app to "pause" when it reaches a certain state, you need to add "debugger;" lines to areas of your code where you want those breakpoints, then start the app in debug mode.
Hope that helps.
Even it's an old yet answered question, there is an easier way, which is passing parameters to node:
forever start -c 'node --debug-brk' main.js
If you don't want to wait for debugger to be attached, replace --debug-brk
by --debug
To inspect nodejs and debug it, use this command
forever -w -c 'node --inspect=IP:PORT' file.js
- -c if for a custom command
- use -w to reload if the file is re-save
- You can pass ip and port for external inspect
- port custom is 9229