bashdb - bash debugger script
bashdb [options] script-name [--] [script options]
bashdb [options] -c execution-string
bash --debugger [bash-options...] script-name
[[--] script options]
"bashdb" is a bash script to which arranges
for another bash script to be debugged. The debugger has a similar command
interface as gdb(1).
The way this script arranges debugging to occur is by including
(or actually "source"-ing) some debug-support code and then
sourcing the given script or command string.
One problem with sourcing a debugged script is that the program
name stored in $0 will be
"bashdb" rather than the name of the
script to be debugged. The debugged script will appear in a call stack not
as the top item but as the item below
"bashdb". If this is of concern, use the
last form given above, "bash --debugger"
script-name [script-options].
If you used bashdb script and need to pass options to the script
to be debugged, add "--" after the script
name. That will tell bashdb not to try to process any further options.
See the reference manual
<http://bashdb.sourceforge.net/bashdb.html> for how to to call the
debugger from inside your program or arrange for the debugger to get called
when your program is sent a signal.
- -h | --help
- Print a usage message on standard error and exit with a return code of
100.
- -A | --annotation level
- Sets to output additional stack and status information which allows
front-ends such as emacs to track what's going on without polling.
This is needed in for regression testing. Using this option is
equivalent to issuing:
set annotation LEVEL
inside the debugger.
- -B | --basename
- In places where a filename appears in debugger output give just the
basename only. This is needed in for regression testing. Using this option
is equivalent to issuing:
set basename on
inside the debugger.
- -n | nx
- Normally the debugger will read debugger commands in
"~/.bashdbinit" if that file exists
before accepting user interaction.
".bashdbinit" is analogus to Perl's
".perldb" or GNU gdb's
".gdbinit": a user might want to create
such a debugger profile to add various user-specific customizations.
Using the "-n" option this
initialization file will not be read. This is useful in regression
testing or in tracking down a problem with one's
".bashdbinit" profile.
- -c command-string
- Instead of specifying the name of a script file, one can give an execution
string that is to be debugged. Use this option to do that.
If you invoke the debugger via "bash
--debugger", the filename that will appear in source listing
or in a call stack trace will be the artificial name *BOGUS*.
- -q | --quiet
- Do not print introductory version and copyright information. This is again
useful in regression testing where we don't want to include a changeable
copyright date in the regression-test matching.
- -x debugger-cmdfile
- Run the debugger commands debugger-cmdfile before accepting user
input. These commands are read however after any
".bashdbinit" commands. Again this is
useful running regression-testing debug scripts.
- -L | --library debugger-library
- The debugger needs to source or include a number of functions and these
reside in a library. If this option is not given the default location of
library is relative to the installed bashdb script:
"../lib/bashdb".
- -T | --tempdir temporary-file-directory
- The debugger needs to make use of some temporary filesystem storage to
save persistent information across a subshell return or in order to
evaluate an expression. The default directory is
"/tmp" but you can use this option to
set the directory where debugger temporary files will be created.
- -t | --tty tty-name
- Debugger output usually goes to a terminal rather than STDOUT which the
debugged program may use. Determination of the tty or pseudo-tty is
normally done automatically. However if you want to control where the
debugger output goes, use this option.
If you want output to go to STDOUT use &1. Note: the
'&' may have to be escaped or quoted to avoid shell interpretation
with forking.
- -V | --version
- Show version number and no-warranty and exit with return code 1.
- -X | --trace
- Similar to ""set -x"" line
tracing except that by default the location of each line, the bash level,
and subshell level are printed. You might be able to get something roughly
similar if you set "PS4" as follows
export PS4='(${BASH_SOURCE}:${LINENO}): ${FUNCNAME[0]}\n'
In contrast however to ""set
-x"" tracing, indentation of the original program is
also preserved in the source output. And if you interrupt the program
with a break (a "SIGINT" signal), you
will go into the debugger (assuming your program doesn't trap
"SIGINT").
The "bashdb" script and
"--debugger" option assume a version of bash
with debugging support. That is you can't debug bash scripts using the
standard-issue version 2.05b bash or earlier versions. In versions after 3.0,
debugging should have been enabled when bash was built. (I think this is
usually the case though.) If you try to run the bashdb script on such as
shell, may get the message:
Sorry, you need to use a debugger-enabled version of bash.
Debugging startup time can be slow especially on large bash
scripts. Scripts created by GNU autoconf are at thousands of lines line and
it is not uncommon for them to be tens of thousands of lines.
There is a provision to address this problem by including a fast
file-to-array read routine (readarray), but the bashdb package has to be
compiled in a special way which needs access to the bash source code and
objects.
Another reason of the debugger slowness is that the debugger has
to intercept every line and check to see if some action is to be taken for
this and this is all in bash code. A better and faster architecture would be
for the debugger to register a list of conditions or stopping places inside
the bash code itself and have it arrange to call the debugger only when a
condition requiring the debugger arises. Checks would be faster as this
would be done in C code and access to internal structures would make this
more efficient.
- <http://bashdb.sourceforge.net/bashdb.html> - an extensive reference
manual.
- <http://bashdb.sourceforge.net> - the homepage for the project
- <http://www.gnu.org/software/bash/manual/bashref.html> - bash
reference manual
The current version is maintained (or not) by Rocky Bernstein.
Copyright (C) 2003, 2006-2007, 2016 Rocky Bernstein
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
(at your option) any later version.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
GNU General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place, Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307 USA
$Id: bashdb-man.pod 2016/08/13 16:30:00 rockyb
Exp $