147

I have breakpoints set but Xcode appears to ignore them.

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  • 6
    ProductClean helped me Apr 7, 2017 at 7:11
  • I had to do a full restart with my computer to get them to work again, and now they are being super buggy. I'm using xcode 10.2.1.
    – llamacorn
    Jul 10, 2019 at 18:18
  • 2
    Xcode 11, Restart & Clean the Xcode not Working, Restart Mac not Working. Delete the app on the device and rebuild fixes this issue. Hope this help someone Oct 18, 2019 at 8:23
  • Facing the same problem and I have tried everything listed here!! It must be a bug May 10, 2022 at 8:45

52 Answers 52

164

First of all, I agree 100% with the earlier folks that said turn OFF Load Symbols Lazily.

I have two more things to add.

(My first suggestion sounds obvious, but the first time someone suggested it to me, my reaction went along these lines: "come on, please, you really think I wouldn't know better...... oh.")

  1. Make sure you haven't accidentally set "Active Build Configuration" to "Release."

  2. Under "Targets" in the graphical tree display of your project, right click on your Target and do "Get Info." Look for a property named "Generate Debug Symbols" (or similar) and make sure this is CHECKED (aka ON). Also, you might try finding (also in Target >> Get Info) a property called "Debug Information Format" and setting it to "Dwarf with dsym file."

There are a number of other properties under Target >> Get Info that might affect you. Look for things like optimizing or compressing code and turn that stuff OFF (I assume you are working in a debug mode, so that this is not bad advice). Also, look for things like stripping symbols and make sure that is also OFF. For example, "Strip Linked Product" should be set to "No" for the Debug target.

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  • 8
    On XCode 4.5.2 I had this issue and it turned out to be because I had enabled "Link-time optimization", so that's another thing to check
    – taxilian
    Dec 4, 2012 at 16:58
  • 9
    To change the Build Configuration, go to Product -> Scheme -> Edit Scheme, under Run - Info. For me what worked was checking "Debug Executable" in that menu. Oct 6, 2014 at 20:47
  • 2
    Hijacking the top answer to add that Bison syntax seems to be another (exotic) cause of breakpoints not working (see my answer below). Hopefully will save some time to the next person with that problem.
    – Dave
    Oct 16, 2014 at 7:06
  • 2
    It's also super easy to inadvertently toggle breakpoint activation with ⌘Y. So watch out for that, kids.
    – dsgrnt
    Dec 13, 2014 at 21:00
  • 1
    To set "Active Build Configuration" to "Debug" instead of "Release" in Xcode 8 go to Product -> Scheme -> Edit Scheme. Click Run on left side. Click Info on top of screen. In Build Configuration drop-down, choose "Debug". May 10, 2017 at 19:13
92

In Xcode 7, what worked for me was:

  1. Make sure that the Target > Scheme > Run - is in Debug mode (was Release)

  2. Make sure to check the option "Debug executable":

Debug executable

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  • 7
    This is exactly what happened to me, checkbox was unchecked
    – anoop4real
    Feb 4, 2016 at 11:04
  • Same issue for me. Shouldn't that option be enabled by default (XCode 8.3) ? Aren't we supposed to be all devs, willing to debug anyway ?
    – dgmz
    Jun 6, 2018 at 10:07
  • Worked for me in Xcode 9.3, it would be great if you provide another image for option 1. Jun 25, 2018 at 13:02
  • 3
    Lost a couple of hours because of this, i hate my life =) Sep 9, 2022 at 14:30
23

Go to the Xcode Debugging preferences. Make sure that "Load Symbols lazily" is NOT selected.

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  • 14
    Unfortunately there are no "debugging" preferences in Xcode 6, and "lazily" doesn't appear in the documentation. Sigh.
    – Oscar
    Sep 30, 2013 at 0:36
  • 1
    alright, now I can't find 'Load Symbols Lazily' option in XCode 6
    – RNA
    Oct 7, 2014 at 8:21
  • How do you disable load symbols lazily? Mar 2, 2023 at 3:09
18

I was just having this same issue (again). After triple-checking "Load symbols lazily" and stripping and debug info generation flags, I did the following:

  1. quit Xcode
  2. open a terminal window and cd to the project directory
  3. cd into the .xcodeproj directory
  4. delete everything except the .pbxproj file (I had frank.mode1v3 and frank.pbxuser)

You can accomplish the same task in finder by right/option-clicking on the .xcodeproj bundle and picking "Show Package Contents".

When I restarted Xcode, all of my windows had reset to default positions, etc, but breakpoints worked!

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  • 3
    This works, but it deletes all your preferences... This should be done when nothing else worked. May 29, 2013 at 15:10
  • worked for me, thanks. I wonder why Xcode sucks that much. Xcode is the worst piece of software ever written by Apple.
    – Duck
    Sep 18, 2014 at 8:56
  • Wow, that's 5 years old. Hard to believe it still works, and that it's still an issue! Sep 19, 2014 at 3:04
  • Did not work for me. I am running Xcode 6.01. Now when I build, I receive multiple missing file errors. I'm reverting my code to resolve. Oct 14, 2014 at 22:02
  • Only had to re start Xcode, my case was due to git versioning, when commiting the xcode user interface state data.
    – Juan Boero
    Apr 11, 2016 at 15:35
18

Issue

  • Background
    • Xcode: 13.0
      • code: Objective-C
  • Issue: added breakpoint, but not work
    • added breakpoint but not work

(possible) Reason and Solution

  • Reason: Xcode bug
    • Solution: Product ->Clean Build Folder, then retry debug (multiple time)
      • Clean Build Folder
  • Reason: disabled Debug
    • Solution: enable it: Product->Scheme->Edit Scheme->Run->Info
      • Build Configuration set to Debug
      • choose/select/enable: Debug executable
      • select Debug executable
  • Reason: disabled all breakpoint
    • Solution: enable it: Debug panel -> click breakpoint icon
      • click breakpoint icon
  • Reason: debug info be optimized
    • Solution: not optimize
    • click Project -> Build Settings -> Apple Clang - Code Generation -> Optimization Level -> Debug make sure is None[-O0]
      • Debug None O0
  • Reason: (function/ symbol name) typo
    • Solution: change to correct (function/symbol) name
    • eg:
      • typo=wrong (ObjC function) name: -[__NSCFConstantString stringByAppendingString:]:
      • correct (ObjC function) name: -[NSString stringByAppendingString:]
  • Reason: NOT restore symbol
    • Solution: do restore symbol
    • eg:
      • before
        • for iOS reversing, origin (released ipa ) Mach-O file, typically is: stripped = no symbol -> add breakpont by function/symbol name: Not work = add breakpoint will fail
          • xcode br fail
      • after: restored symbol
        • after restore symbol for iOS app (Mach-O) file, then (ObjC function name) breakpoint worked
          • xcode br work
15

One of the possible solutions for this could be ....go to Product>Scheme>Edit scheme>..Under Run>info>Executable check "Debug executable".

0
13

For Xcode 4.x: Goto Product>Debug Workflow and uncheck "Show Disassembly When Debugging".

For Xcode 5.x Goto Debug>Debug Workflow and uncheck "Show Disassembly When Debugging".

0
12

Another reason

Set DeploymentPostprocessing to NO in BuildSettings - details here

In short -

Activating this setting indicates that binaries should be stripped and file mode, owner, and group information should be set to standard values. [DEPLOYMENT_POSTPROCESSING]

enter image description here

2
  • After updating to XCode 7, This setting was somehow YES only in my subproject and then breakpoints didnt work in subprojects. And after setting to NO, it was perfect! Feb 17, 2016 at 13:59
  • This worked for me only after cleaning the project so a full rebuild will take place.
    – Ran
    Mar 9, 2016 at 14:29
9

See this post: Breakpoints not working in Xcode?. You might be pushing "Run" instead of "Debug" in which case your program is not running with the help of gdb, in which case you cannot expect breakpoints to work!

1
  • In Xcode 6.4, there is now only a Run button and whether it runs a debug configuration or not depends on the currently selected scheme settings. Jul 23, 2015 at 5:32
6

This had me in Xcode 9 for half a frustrating day. It ended up been a simple debug setting.

Go Debug > Debug Workflow and make sure 'Always Show Disassembly' is turned off. Simple as that. :(

1
  • What does 'Always Show Disassembly' mean? This didn't worked for me. :-( Dec 7, 2021 at 9:34
6

Solution for me with XCode 9.4.1 (did not stop at any breakpoint):

Under build Target -> Build Settings -> Optimization Level: Switched from "Optimize for speed" -> "No optimization" (now it's slower but works)

0
6

What solved it in my case was quite simple, in Xcode - Product - Clean Build Folder followed by Product - Run (not the Play Xcode button).

(Had the issue on Xcode 11 -beta 4 after switching to unit testing with Xcode play button long press)

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4

Came to this page with the same problem (C code in Xcode 6 not stopping at breakpoints) and none of the solutions above worked (the project was practically out of the box, settings-wise, so little chance for any of the debugger settings to be set to the wrong value)...

After wasting quite some time reducing the problem, I finally figured out the culprit (for my code):

Xcode (/LLVM) does not like Bison-style #line preprocessor commands.

Removing them fixed the problem (debugger stopped at my breakpoints).

4

For Xcode 4:

go Product -> Debug ->  Activate Breakpoints

This is applicable for all Xcode version. Shortcut key is: command key + Y. Press this key combination to activate/deactivate breakpoints.

0
2

I have a lot of problems with breakpoints in Xcode (2.4.1). I use a project that just contains other projects (like a Solution in Visual Studio). I find sometimes that breakpoints don't work at all unless there is at least one breakpoint set in the starting project (i.e. the one containing the entry point for my code). If the only breakpoints are in "lower level" projects, they just get ignored.

It also seems as if Xcode only handles breakpoint operations correctly if you act on the breakpoint when you're in the project that contains the source line the breakpoint's on.

If I try deleting or disabling breakpoints via another project, the action sometimes doesn't take effect, even though the debugger indicates that it has. So I will find myself breaking on disabled breakpoints, or on a (now invisible) breakpoint that I removed earlier.

0
2

I've had my breakpoints not work and then done Build / Clean All Targets to get them working again.

2

I think the problem could be incompatibility between device versions and Xcode. I have this problem when attempting to debug on my iPhone 4S running iOS 5.0.1. I am still using Xcode 3.2.5. I got the symbols from the handset by selecting "use this device for development" in the Organiser window. This phone refuses to breakpoint however. My old 3GS will breakpoint, same Xcode project, same settings... just different device and it's running iOS 4.0. I guess this is an Xcode bug in 3.2.5, since I have the symbols. Having tried all the solutions posted here so far, I have decided the solution to my problem is to go ahead and upgrade to XCode 4. Perhaps you cannot debug effectively unless your base SDK is at least as high as the system on which to debug. Maybe that's obvious - can anyone confirm?

Edit: I will update when I can confirm this is true.

2

Deleting my Build folder solved the problem for me.

2

If all else fails, instead of a breakpoint, you can call the following function:

void BreakPoint(void) {
    int i=1;
    #if !__OPTIMIZE__
    printf("Code is waiting; hit pause to see.\n");
    while(i);
    #endif
}

To resume, manually set i to zero, then hit the resume button.

2

It has happened the same thing to me in XCode 6.3.1. I managed to fix it by:

  • Going to View->Navigators->Show Debug Navigators
  • Right click in the project root -> Move Breakpoints (If selected the User option)
  • (I also Selected the option share breakpoints, even though I'm not sure if that necessary).

After doing that change I set the Move breakpoints options back to the project, and unselecting the Share breakpoints option, and still works.

I don't exactly know why but this get my breakpoints back.

1
  • 1
    Thank you! This also fixed the slow responsiveness of debugging logs
    – Jim75
    Aug 12, 2020 at 15:52
2

For this, and also for Xcode 6 and above make sure that the breakpoint state button is activated (the blue arrow-like button):

enter image description here

1

In Xcode 4

- Product menu > Manage Schemes
- Select the scheme thats having debugging problems (if only one choose that)
- Click Edit button at bottom
- Edit Scheme dialog appears
- in left panel click on Run APPNAME.app
- on Right hand panel make sure youre on INFO tab
- look for drop down DEBUGGER:
- someone had set this to None
- set to LLDB if this is your preferred debugger
- can also change BUILD CONFIGURATION drop down to Debug 
-      but I have other targets set to AdHoc which debug fine once Debugger is set
1

I found the problem. Somehow the "Show Disassembly when debugging" was enabled in my XCode which creates that problem. When I disabled it, all my debugger stopped in my source code.

You can find it under: Product->Debug Workflow->Show Disassembly when debugging.

1

You can Activate / Disactivate Breakpoints in dropdown menu enter image description here

1

I tried all the above things but for me only deactivating the debugging breakpoints once and then activating them worked.

1
  • @IshantMrinal Why is this not relevant? The user provided an answer that worked in his scenario. Aug 8, 2017 at 11:39
1

I was facing a problem like that and after a lot of wasted time i realized that other developer created a folder using special characters, after renamed folder breakpoints is back working

1
  • Same here, using () in file name will also encounter this problem with Xcode 15.2 Feb 5 at 15:41
0

When setting your break point, right click and you should get several options about how the break point is handled (log vars and continue, pause execution, etc)

Also make sure the "Load Symbols lazily" is not selected in the debug preferences.

(Applies to Xcode 3.1, not sure about past/future versions)

0

Also make sure that the AppStore distribution of the app is not also installed on the device.

0

Another thing to check is that if you have an "Entitlements" plist file for your debug mode (possibly because you're doing stuff with the Keychain), make sure that plist file has the "get-task-allow" = YES row. Without it, debugging and logging will be broken.

1
  • Note that the get-task-allow entitlement may be included by an Xcode Managed Profile: imgur.com/a/qS27asO
    – Carl G
    Nov 29, 2021 at 15:45
0

There appears to be 3 states for the breakpoints in Xcode. If you click on them they'll go through the different settings. Dark blue is enabled, grayed out is disabled and I've seen a pale blue sometimes that required me to click on the breakpoint again to get it to go to the dark blue color.

Other than this make sure that you're launching it with the debug command not the run command. You can do that by either hitting option + command + return, or the Go (debug) option from the run menu.

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