I am using a third-party DLL. For some particular cases, a function in the DLL is throwing an exception. Is it possible to debug the DLL in the Visual Studio?
After
There are two methods I've come across:
1) Accessing the DLL project from the using project. This involves building the DLL in a separate instance of Visual Studio and then accessing the DLL through a different project in Visual Studio (this assumes you have the source code). There a number of ways to accomplish this:
Trace.WriteLine
statements in the DLL that will show
up in the 'Output' window in Visual Studio.System.Diagnostics.Debugger.Break() statements to the DLL code. When
running the calling project in Visual Studio,
program execution will stop there.
From here you can add access the
call stack (including all function
calls in DLL itself) and set break
points (although the icon for
the breakpoint will appear disabled
and the hover text for the break
point will read "The breakpoint will
not currently be hit. No symbols
have been loaded for this document"). System.Diagnostics.Debugger.Break()
(see above).2) Attaching a using process to the DLL project. This involved hooking the Visual Studio debugger into a running process.