I have a NuGet package I created and installed in another solution but now I need to debug the code of the package when called from my new solution.
I tried referenci
To debug any dll you need the symbol file of it (.pdb). If you build your project in the debug
configuration you will see that those files are generated and put in the build output folder.
Visual studio loads those symbol files from different places as described here. The easiest way to debug your nuget packages is to put the .pdb files of the packages in the build output folder of the project you want to debug.
If the code you are trying to debug is classified as non-user code you need to uncheck Just My Code
in the debugging options.
The following quote from the Microsoft - Visual Studio Docs shows what counts as user and what as non-user code.
User and non-user code
To distinguish user code from non-user code, Just My Code looks at symbol (.pdb) files and program optimizations. The debugger considers code to be non-user code when the binary is optimized or when the .pdb file is not available.
Three attributes also affect what the debugger considers to be My Code:
- DebuggerNonUserCodeAttribute tells the debugger that the code it is applied to is not My Code.
- DebuggerHiddenAttribute hides the code from the debugger, even if Just My Code is turned off.
- DebuggerStepThroughAttribute tells the debugger to step through the code it is applied to, rather than step into the code.
All other code is considered to be user code.
How to debug code in a nuget package created by me
Just as NtFreX answered, "To debug any dll you need the symbol file of it (.pdb). ". So you can create symbol packages which allow consumers to step into your package code in the Visual Studio debugger.
The way we do it (and works):
For the detail info, you can refer to Creating symbol packages.
If these packages are not suitable for publishing on NuGet Gallery/SymbolSource, you can put the *.nupkg and *.symbols.nupkg files on a local disk.
Note: Add the source code to the Debug Source Files for the solution that references the package(Right click on Solution, select Properties...Common Properties...Debug Source Files, and add the root source directory for the relevant binary reference)
I got this working by building the project the nuget package originated from in debug mode, then just copying the pdb and dll from the debug directory to the location of the nuget dll within the project I wanted to debug it in.
e.g copy from
ExternalNugetPackage\bin\Debug\
to
ProjectDirectory\Packages\ExternalNugetPackage.1.0.0\lib\net4.5
For Visual Studio 2017 and your nuget package source code hosted on GitHub or BitBucket:
Enable full debug information in *.csproj file:
<PropertyGroup Condition="'$(Configuration)'=='Debug'">
<DebugType>full</DebugType>
<DebugSymbols>true</DebugSymbols>
</PropertyGroup>
or right-click project properties, build, advanced, output debugging information - set to full.
To enable automatic source download and stepping for your nuget package dll, add nuget package SourceLink.Create.CommandLine
to your project, or add it manually into *.csproj file:
<ItemGroup>
<PackageReference Include="SourceLink.Create.CommandLine" Version="2.8.2" PrivateAssets="All" />
</ItemGroup>
More info here.
In tools - options - debugging, disable "Enable Just My Code", and enable "Suppress JIT optimization on module load (Managed Only)".
After this, you should be able to step inside methods from your nuget package dll.
As it might help someone else, here is an additional explanation of the problem in-hand.
What do I need to debug a pkg created by me?
Well, how can I include the source code of my nuget package?