I wonder if I can run multiple instances (right now two instances) of my application in debug mode by doing a simple click or set a key for that...
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No, you can't run multiple instances of your application from Visual Studio. Features like "Edit and Continue", for example, can only work if there's a single instance. You can, however, run multiple instances from outside of Visual Studio, but you'll lose some of these fancy features.– Cody Gray ♦Mar 31, 2011 at 11:32
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I can run multiple instances of my app and debug them in the same VS enviroment. I just want to know if I can do that by pressing a key or a click to a button..– MCAMar 31, 2011 at 11:40
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I assume you're talking about something like that discussed here? More specifically, you run multiple instances manually, and then attach the debugger? No, there's no automated solution for doing this; it's not a common use case. Try writing a macro.– Cody Gray ♦Mar 31, 2011 at 11:43
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possible duplicate of Run multiple copies of an app from Visual Studio– Cody Gray ♦Mar 31, 2011 at 11:43
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Yeap I have read that thread, and that's how I run multiple instances. I just thought if there's an easy one click way to do it.. I guess there isn't. Thank you.– MCAMar 31, 2011 at 12:57
4 Answers
Not many people seem to know this, but this is perfectly possible, though I admit it's not very obvious. Here's what you do:
- suppose your current project is A, and it's output is c:\bin\my.exe
- add an empty project to the solution for A, call it 'Dummy'
- under Dummy's Project Properties->Debugging set the Command to point c:\bin\my.exe
- under Solution Properties->Configuration Manager, uncheck all builds of the Dummy project so VS won't try to build it (building an empty project fails)
- under Solution Properties->Startup Project, select Multiple Startup Projects and set the Action for both A and Dummy to Start
- now hit F5 and your exe will be launched twice, each under a seperate debugging instance. (as you will be able to see in the Debug->View->Processes window)
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3Great answer! BTW In VS2010 I needed to set Project Properties|Debug|Start Action|Start external program and also Project Properties|Debug|Start Options|Working directory Jul 11, 2012 at 14:31
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1you're welcome :] I stumbled upon this when wanting to debug client/server applications simultaneously. For such cases this workflow is simply amazing: 1 source code window with the client code, next to it 1 with the server code, and step-by-step debugging at your hands.– stijnNov 30, 2012 at 14:03
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Nice! I wanted to run two instances of a test program that exercises a library. I used the library project in lieu of a dummy project, setting its debugging Command to "$(ProjectDir)test\$(Platform)\$(Configuration)\test.exe" - so both instances of the test program use the selected config and platform.– yoyoJul 8, 2020 at 17:43
You can use "Multiple Startup Projects" feature, but avoid creating dummy projects by hand: just add your debuggee executable into the solution directly:
- Solution > Add existing project > Path to .exe
If you neeed several instances, Visual Studio won't allow you to add the same executable twice, but adding a symlink to it with another name works as expected.
MSDN: How to: Debug an Executable Not Part of a Visual Studio Solution
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2I wish this works, getting the following message: "The solution already contains an item named 'A.B.C'."– ShloEmiAug 8, 2018 at 8:05
Is Visual Studio 2013 this is even easier!
Project-> Properties -> Debug -> check "Start external program" and click the ... button, navigate to your .exe of the other program.
Then Make sure in your Solution -> Properties -> MultipleStartup Projects that it's checked.
You can run two instances of your application from where it is built; example: d:\test\bin\debug\app.exe and attach both instances to the Visual Studio 2010 debugger.
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1This is possible, but this does not answer this question, as this is not "a simple click or set a key for that". Moreover, attaching debugger after the app is run is sometimes not sufficient, as you miss the app initialization this way.– SumaDec 6, 2012 at 9:06