Step-by-step debugging with IPython

你。 提交于 2019-11-27 09:57:13

Nobody mentioned IPython's %pdb flag yet. Just call %pdb in IPython and when an error occurs, you're automatically dropped to ipdb. While you don't have the stepping immediately, you're in ipdb afterwards.

This makes debugging individual functions easy, as you can just load a file with %load and then run a function. You could force an error with an assert at the right position.

What about ipdb.set_trace() ? In your code :

import ipdb; ipdb.set_trace()

update: now in Python 3.7, we can write breakpoint(). It works the same, but it also obeys to the PYTHONBREAKPOINT environment variable. This feature comes from this PEP.

This allows for full inspection of your code, and you have access to commands such as c (continue), n (execute next line), s (step into the method at point) and so on.

See the ipdb repo and a list of commands. IPython is now called (edit: part of) Jupyter.


ps: note that an ipdb command takes precedence over python code. So in order to write list(foo) you'd need print list(foo).

Also, if you like the ipython prompt (its emacs and vim modes, history, completions,…) it's easy to get the same for your project since it's based on the python prompt toolkit.

(Update on May 28, 2016) Using RealGUD in Emacs

For anyone in Emacs, this thread shows how to accomplish everything described in the OP (and more) using

  1. a new important debugger in Emacs called RealGUD which can operate with any debugger (including ipdb).
  2. The Emacs package isend-mode.

The combination of these two packages is extremely powerful and allows one to recreate exactly the behavior described in the OP and do even more.

More info on the wiki article of RealGUD for ipdb.


Original answer:

After having tried many different methods for debugging Python, including everything mentioned in this thread, one of my preferred ways of debugging Python with IPython is with embedded shells.

Defining a custom embedded IPython shell:

Add the following on a script to your PYTHONPATH, so that the method ipsh() becomes available.

import inspect

# First import the embed function
from IPython.terminal.embed import InteractiveShellEmbed
from IPython.config.loader import Config

# Configure the prompt so that I know I am in a nested (embedded) shell
cfg = Config()
prompt_config = cfg.PromptManager
prompt_config.in_template = 'N.In <\\#>: '
prompt_config.in2_template = '   .\\D.: '
prompt_config.out_template = 'N.Out<\\#>: '

# Messages displayed when I drop into and exit the shell.
banner_msg = ("\n**Nested Interpreter:\n"
"Hit Ctrl-D to exit interpreter and continue program.\n"
"Note that if you use %kill_embedded, you can fully deactivate\n"
"This embedded instance so it will never turn on again")   
exit_msg = '**Leaving Nested interpreter'

# Wrap it in a function that gives me more context:
def ipsh():
    ipshell = InteractiveShellEmbed(config=cfg, banner1=banner_msg, exit_msg=exit_msg)

    frame = inspect.currentframe().f_back
    msg   = 'Stopped at {0.f_code.co_filename} at line {0.f_lineno}'.format(frame)

    # Go back one level! 
    # This is needed because the call to ipshell is inside the function ipsh()
    ipshell(msg,stack_depth=2)

Then, whenever I want to debug something in my code, I place ipsh() right at the location where I need to do object inspection, etc. For example, say I want to debug my_function below

Using it:

def my_function(b):
  a = b
  ipsh() # <- This will embed a full-fledged IPython interpreter
  a = 4

and then I invoke my_function(2) in one of the following ways:

  1. Either by running a Python program that invokes this function from a Unix shell
  2. Or by invoking it directly from IPython

Regardless of how I invoke it, the interpreter stops at the line that says ipsh(). Once you are done, you can do Ctrl-D and Python will resume execution (with any variable updates that you made). Note that, if you run the code from a regular IPython the IPython shell (case 2 above), the new IPython shell will be nested inside the one from which you invoked it, which is perfectly fine, but it's good to be aware of. Eitherway, once the interpreter stops on the location of ipsh, I can inspect the value of a (which be 2), see what functions and objects are defined, etc.

The problem:

The solution above can be used to have Python stop anywhere you want in your code, and then drop you into a fully-fledged IPython interpreter. Unfortunately it does not let you add or remove breakpoints once you invoke the script, which is highly frustrating. In my opinion, this is the only thing that is preventing IPython from becoming a great debugging tool for Python.

The best you can do for now:

A workaround is to place ipsh() a priori at the different locations where you want the Python interpreter to launch an IPython shell (i.e. a breakpoint). You can then "jump" between different pre-defined, hard-coded "breakpoints" with Ctrl-D, which would exit the current embedded IPython shell and stop again whenever the interpreter hits the next call to ipsh().

If you go this route, one way to exit "debugging mode" and ignore all subsequent breakpoints, is to use ipshell.dummy_mode = True which will make Python ignore any subsequent instantiations of the ipshell object that we created above.

You can start IPython session from pudb and go back to the debugging session as you like.

BTW, ipdb is using IPython behind the scenes and you can actually use IPython functionality such as TAB completion and magic commands (the one starts with %). If you are OK with ipdb you can start it from IPython using commands such as %run and %debug. ipdb session is actually better than plain IPython one in the sense you can go up and down in the stack trace etc. What is missing in ipdb for "object inspection"?

Also, python.el bundled with Emacs >= 24.3 has nice ipdb support.

Looks like the approach in @gaborous's answer is deprecated.

The new approach seems to be:

from IPython.core import debugger
debug = debugger.Pdb().set_trace

def buggy_method():
    debug()

Prefixing an "!" symbol to commands you type in pdb seems to have the same effect as doing something in an IPython shell. This works for accessing help for a certain function, or even variable names. Maybe this will help you to some extent. For example,

ipdb> help(numpy.transpose)
*** No help on (numpy.transpose)

But !help(numpy.transpose) will give you the expected help page on numpy.transpose. Similarly for variable names, say you have a variable l, typing "l" in pdb lists the code, but !l prints the value of l.

Did you try this tip?

Or better still, use ipython, and call:

from IPython.Debugger import Tracer; debug_here = Tracer()

then you can just use

debug_here()

whenever you want to set a breakpoint

One option is to use an IDE like Spyder which should allow you to interact with your code while debugging (using an IPython console, in fact). In fact, Spyder is very MATLAB-like, which I presume was intentional. That includes variable inspectors, variable editing, built-in access to documentation, etc.

the right, easy, cool, exact answer for the question is to use %run macro with -d flag.

In [4]: run -d myscript.py
NOTE: Enter 'c' at the ipdb>  prompt to continue execution.        
> /cygdrive/c/Users/mycodefolder/myscript.py(4)<module>()
      2                                                            
      3                        
----> 4 a=1                                            
      5 b=2

If you type exit() in embed() console the code continue and go to the next embed() line.

The Pyzo IDE has similar capabilities as the OP asked for. You don't have to start in debug mode. Similarly to MATLAB, the commands are executed in the shell. When you set up a break-point in some source code line, the IDE stops the execution there and you can debug and issue regular IPython commands as well.

It does seem however that step-into doesn't (yet?) work well (i.e. stopping in one line and then stepping into another function) unless you set up another break-point.

Still, coming from MATLAB, this seems the best solution I've found.

Running from inside Emacs' IPython-shell and breakpoint set via pdb.set_trace() should work.

Checked with python-mode.el, M-x ipython RET etc.

From python 3.2, you have the interact command, which gives you access to the full python/ipython command space.

Not explicitly said before is that you can call IPython.embed() from within ipdb.

ipdb is great for stepping through code and for itrospection, but it doesn't handle other things, like multiple lines, well. IPython handles multi-line statements well.

To induce the debugger, call the following in your code:

import idpb; ipdb.set_trace()

This allows for introspection and stepping.

If you need IPython functionality, call the following in ipdb>:

from IPython import embed; embed()

Regarding Emacs, here's my idiosyncratic solution which I hope inspires you.

I use Emacs with M-x shell. I have a yassnippet defined for ipdb which induces the debugger. The bm package highlights the line so that I don't forget to remove it from the source code:

# -*- mode: snippet -*-
# name: ipdb
# key: ipdb
# expand-env: ((yas-after-exit-snippet-hook #'bm-toggle))
# --
import ipdb; ipdb.set_trace()

I import IPython in my .pdbrc file:

try:
    from IPython import embed
except:
    pass

This allows me to call embed() from any ipdb instance (when IPython is installed).

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