8 releases

0.2.1 Jan 28, 2023
0.2.0 Jan 27, 2023
0.1.5 Dec 10, 2022

#505 in Debugging


Used in rdbg-client

MIT/Apache

21KB
388 lines

rdbg

Crate Docs MSRV

Quick and dirty Rust remote debugging. This crate is more or less equivalent to dbg and println in the stdlib but delivers the payloads via a TCP socket to a remote viewer.

Use Cases

In many cases, for quick debugging the dbg and println macros will often suffice. However, there are three main use cases where this crate comes in handy:

  1. Tests - while it is possible to output from tests it can be tricky to do so at times
  2. Programs with no stdout available (example: Windows services, etc.)
  3. Programs with lots of output, where it is difficult to disambiguate debug output from other output

In all cases, this crate does not replace a regular debugger. If you wish/need to use a full-fledged debugger by all means do so.

Features

  • No dependencies
  • Enabled and added in seconds
  • Familiar API
  • Can be quickly be removed or compiled into "no-op"

Example

let world = "world!";
// More or less equivalent to `println`
rdbg::msg!("Hello {}", world);

// More or less equivalent to `dbg`
rdbg::vals!(world, 1 + 1);

That works fine for servers and long-running programs, but since the messages are delivered via a different thread there is an implicit race condition. As such, if your program is not a server or long-running you will likely need the flush function at the end of your program. This will wait for all queued messages to be sent. For failing tests, this function will need to be called before the point of crash to see the output.

let world = "world!";
// More or less equivalent to `println`
rdbg::msg!("Hello {}", world);

// More or less equivalent to `dbg`
rdbg::vals!(world, 1 + 1);
// Wait for messages to be transmitted before exiting
rdbg::flush();

Usage

[dependencies]
rdbg = "0.2"

Features

  • enabled (default) - enables debugging
  • insecure-remote - Listens on 0.0.0.0 for remote debugging purposes (insecure, no auth)

Use --no-default-features option to quickly turn this crate into a no-op. Please note that due to feature unification other uses of this crate within the same project could turn it back on.

No runtime deps

Features