"No source available" when debugging template methods in CDT - eclipse

I'm using GDB to debug a program in Eclipse CDT 8.1.1. It works fine, until I try to enter a template method. I then get a "no source available for ..." message and can no longer view the code, and I am forced to either go up the stack or switch to instruction stepping mode.
If I try to place a breakpoint inside the function itself, the program halts there, but it still loses sync with the source. In any case, the sync returns when I leave the template function.
How can I solve this, to enable me to properly debug template methods?

Related

hot swapped warning without making any changes (Spring tool suite 3.9)

When running my code in debug mode, I keep getting 2 error messages:
Could not delete [path_to]\productiondb.log. May be locked by another process
I don't know what process might be locking it. It comes when I make changes to the code while my Pivotal tc Server is running in debug mode, but it dosent seem to create a lot's of trouble. Sometimes however, I get this warning:
Also due to some changes. I usally just restart the server and move on. This isen't the real problem, the real problem is that I get these messages when I havent doen any changes. Somethimes it accures when I run a certen part of the code, other times i occurs when I open certen codes in sts, however, it doen't seem to stop at the same place twice.
I am suspecting that this has something to do with git. I am using git to change between versions and doing tests. So I am thinking that STS has some of the code in memory from before I changed branche with git, and isen't updating it before I run or open the file with that code. But I am rather new to both sts and git, and can't be certan that it would work that way. If it is, does anyone know how to update sts after I have changed branch? If it is not, does anyone know what might causing it?
If you run an app in debug mode, the Eclipse Debugger tells the application when code gets changed and tries to use the debug API to swap in the new code into the running application. This is especially useful if you debug your code, hit a breakpoint, step through the code, fit the issue, change the code, and press save. At that moment, the Eclipse compiler updates the class file and tells the running JVM to swap in the new code. If that succeeds, the debugger will jump back to the last stack frame and the execution of your app will continue with the beginning of the method that you entered. This allows you to directly continue to debug and step through the updated code without restarting the app.
While this is a great feature of the JVM, it is very limited in terms of what scope of changes to the classes the JVM can deal with while doing this hot-swap. It is usually limited to method implementations. So adding new methods, adding or deleting members of the class, etc, are not supported. As a result, the above screenshot will appear. It means that the JVM wasn't able to hot-swap the changed code and will continue to run with the previously loaded code instead of the changed one.

Unable to turn on GWT Super Dev Mode

While trying to use GWT Super Dev Mode, I followed those guidelines :
GWT-2.5-Super-Dev-Mode
Introducing Super Dev Mode
How does GWT's Super Dev Mode work?
However, I am stuck at the step trying to turn on Super Dev Mode :
Once I fully compiled my project, I run the code server and the dev mode, go at http://127.0.0.1:8888/myapp.html (without the ?gwt.codesvr=127.0.0.1:9997) and then click on the bookmark Dev Mode On. It detects my module, asks me to recompile, a glass screen appears with a message Compiling MyApp ... and then nothing ... No error, no stack trace either in Chrome or Eclipse. Just nothing happens.
Debugging the js code from dev_mode_on.js file, the script is interrupted at line 324 :
...
function getBindingParameters(module_name, get_prop_map) {
var session_key = '__gwtDevModeSession:' + module_name;
--> var prop_map = get_prop_map(); <--
...
Once the function get_prop_map is called, a few more obfuscated functions run and the debugger returns.
I know it is still experimental, but do you have any idea of what I could have done wrong ?
PS: I am using GWT 2.5, GWT-maven-plugin 2.5 and Chrome 23.0.1271.64 m
We have found a similar issue and tracked down the cause, looks like a boundary case not handled in GWT.
More info can be found here: http://code.google.com/p/google-web-toolkit/issues/detail?id=7894
I don't have an answer, but I can give some general debugging tips for this sort of problem.
Super Dev Mode currently (as of 2.5) doesn't report any progress to the web browser while it's compiling. It won't update the dialog until the compile finishes. So it's possible that it's just very slow for your program for some reason, or the compile stopped and somehow didn't report an error like it normally does.
However, there are other ways you can monitor its progress. The compiler log is available as a web page by following links from the code server's front page; you will have to refresh the page to see updates. Or you could look at the log on disk in the code server's work directory. (You can set the work directory with the -workDir argument when you start it.)
Another way is to start the code server from the command line. Any stack traces from the code server will be printed there. You should also be able to look at the output in Eclipse or IntelliJ if you're running it from there.
From this you should be able to tell whether the compiler is slow, but still working (it's still printing output) or has actually stopped with a stack trace.

eclipse - class find editor - source not find

I have a problem with eclipse debugging. I had a proper working code and few hours ago I add one more external library to do something new. When I run the program now it works properly, but when I want to debug it, it stopped on the first line of a new part of the code (the one using the newest external library). It shows the info:
"Class File Editor
Source not found
The source attachment does not contain the source for the file ModelBuilder.class"
When I try to step over I just receive the same information but connected with other files. After stepping over a multiple times I finally get back to my code and can debug the rest of the program normally.
Of course I can do it always but does anybody know the solution to that problem, not to click step over multiple times but debug normally?
It should not enter the external library code unless you step into it, or there's an exception in that code. If you find yourself stepping through code you don't have source to, use Step Return, which jumps to the end of whatever method you're in.
If it is caused by an exception in the library code and you want to ignore it, go to Window > Preferences > Java > Debug and uncheck "Suspend execution on uncaught exceptions".
If you know what exception is causing the execution to suspend, then you could also try this:
Go to the Debug perspective
Open the Breakpoints view
Click the J with the exclamation point by it (J!)
Search for the exception that triggers the debug suspend
Uncheck the two check boxes
Say OK

How do I set my source path for STS/Eclipse (using Groovy grails) and make it stick?

When I debug a Groovy/Grails program in STS, the first time in a session that it hits a breakpoint it asks me where the source code is.
When I click on that dialog, I need to add my "Project" and then it will work until I exit STS and restart.
(But for DEBUGGING only! Lines of code mentioned in the console, whether or not they're displayed as links, will NEVER display the source when clicked on.)
1) How do I make it remember it forever? I looked through all the properties/settings I could find.
And
2) How can I click on an line of code that's mentioned in the console window (say an Exception) and have it automatically go to that line? (Micsosoft Visual Studio will do it...and it's never had to ask me where my source code is. In my 15 years of using it....)
Not everything gets hyperlinked, and even when it does, it will never find the source code, even though I can navigate to it in the Project or Package explorers:
I can answer the second part of the question here. If you see a reference to a stack frame in the console window and it is not there is no hyperlink (often the hyperlink exists, but in certain situations it will not be), then you should select and copy the stack trace and paste it into a Java stack trace console:

Why does my Eclipse project have phantom debugger breakpoints?

I've got a small project which, when run in the Eclipse debugger, always seems to stop in FileInputStream.class line 106, where files are opened. There are no breakpoints set, but Eclipse behaves exactly as if I have a breakpoint here. If I clear all breakpoints, it still happens.
I have a second much-larger project in the same Eclipse workspace which does not suffer from this problem.
I just moved the smaller project off of my old Linux machine, where I developed it in Europa Eclipse and had this problem, onto my new Windows machine, where I continue to see the problem in Ganymede Eclipse. The problem persists across operating systems and across Eclipse versions, yet apparently not across projects. I don't get it! I grepped through every file in this project's directory and couldn't find anything that might be a file somehow directing Eclipse to stop in FileInputStream.
Further info: the apparent breakpoint is actually not for line 106 of FileInputStream; it appears to be an Exception breakpoint for FileNotFoundException, being thrown from native code called from that line in FileInputStream. But again, I don't appear to have any breakpoints set at all. Are Exception breakpoints defined somewhere else?
Did you try to un-select
Window > Preferences > Java > Debug : Suspend execution on uncaught exceptions
? (as mentioned in this thread, for instance)
Why does Eclipse work that way?
It goes back to 2002, when the breakpoint object hierarchy has been stripped down.
In order to set a breakpoint, with the old API, a client required Java Model Objects - such as IType, IField, etc.
With the new API, all that is required by the debug model is type names, field names, etc.
This allows clients to set breakpoints when Java Model Objects are not available.
Clients now specify the resource to associate a breakpoint with (before we constrained it to the associated Java Model resources).
Breakpoints can now also be "hidden". That is, they need not be registered with the breakpoint manager.
Breakpoints can also be selectively persisted (markers only allowed all/none of a marker type to be persisted).
This makes the debug model more flexible, and gives clients more building blocks.
This has also simplified some part of our Java debug implementation - for example, the feature "suspend on any uncaught exception", simply sets a breakpoint for the type named "java.lang.Throwable", rather than a specific IType in a specific project.
The breakpoint is not registered with the breakpoint manager (i.e. hidden) - it is only known and used by one client.
Another example is the "run to line breakpoint". The IJavaRunToLineBreakpoint has been removed, as its special functionality is no longer required. Now, the Java debug ui simply creates a "line breakpoint" that is hidden, non persisted, and has a hit count of 1. This is an example of providing building blocks to clients.
I had a similar problem but the accepted solution did not work for me. I am doing Eclipse Android development and had set some breakpoints and later unset them. Even though I disabled them Eclipse kept stopping execution at these phantom breakpoints. The solution for me was to open the Breakpoints window:
Window > Show View > Other...
Debug > Breakpoints
Then right click any breakpoint and select "Remove All"
Unfortunately you have to reset all your valid breakpoints, but this worked for me and has prevented much angst and frustration going forward.
Some pictures to guide others:
For those who don't find other solutions useful, I found my personal solution to my problem. I work with a .jar library which is generated by building another project into the workspace. If I set a breakpoint in a .java into the library project, then the breakpoint will be triggered when debugging the final project. However when debugger pauses the execution the .class file is shown which has its own breakpoints and therefore the breakpoint set into the .java file is not shown here!
Solution:
In order to remove the breakpoint you have to remove the breakpoint into the .java file, in the library project.
I ran into an issue where a source file had persistent markers for breakpoints that didn't exist. I tried cleaning the project, doing a full build, restarting Eclipse - nothing worked.
I went digging through the Eclipse metadata, and found the projects .markers file. Deleting that file finally fixed the issue.
For anyone else having this issue, open your workspace directory, then navigate to .metadata/.plugins/org.eclipse.core.resources/.projects/your project, then rename/remove file .markers.
For example, if your workspace folder is ~/workspace, and your project is named Foo, you could do:
$ mv ~/workspace/.metadata/.plugins/org.eclipse.core.resources/.projects/Foo/.markers ~/safe.Foo.markers
For those who didn't find a solution from the previous answers, they can try what solved my problem. It is I think similar to HAL9000 problem/solution
If you have two classes with the same name (in two different projects) the breakpoints on the one, apply on the other one as well. Both of them show in the "Breakpoints" window.
Solution: If you remove the breakpoint from the class - with the same name - that you are not using it removes the breakpoint from the class you are debugging.