pugdebug is a standalone debugging client for PHP applications that uses Xdebug as the debugging engine.
A python 3.5, PyQt5 project.
NOTE: Not maintained! Check this fork instead!
Running pugdebug is quite easy.
There are executables available for Linux and Windows operating systems.
Every release includes a tar.gz/ZIP package with the executables. They include everything needed for pugdebug to work correctly on your system.
Download and extract the archive, run the pugdebug
binary file.
That's it. No need to set up or install anything.
The current release of pugdebug is 1.0.0.
It includes a tar.gz/ZIP package with the binary, for both Linux and Windows. It should include everything needed for pugdebug to work correctly, so just download the package for your operating system, unpack it and start pugdebug.
Please report any issues you encounter.
Please take a look at the change log.
If you are using a pugdebug build, just execute the binary, that should bring up pugdebug.
If you cloned this repository, go to the sources directory, activate the Python
virtual environment and start pugdebug by issuing a python app.py
command.
To bring up the Settings
window, navigate to Files -> Settings
(shortcut: Ctrl+S
).
The Path
section refers to the path settings.
The Root
under the Path
section is the root path where the project you want to debug is
located.
The Maps from
under the Path
section is for when the project you want to debug is under
a virtual machine, like Vagrant. Here you would enter the path of the project under that VM.
For example, if a project I'm working on is in /home/robert/wwww/pugdebug
and that maps to
/var/www
under the VM, the Root
would be set to /home/robert/www/pugdebug
and the
Maps from
would be set to /var/www
.
The Host
setting should be the IP address of the machine on which pugdebug runs. In most cases
it is perfectly fine to leave this field blank.
The Port
setting is the port number on which Xdebug will attempt to connect to the machine on
which pugdebug runs. The default port is 9000
.
The IDE Key
setting allows to filter out messages from Xdebug based on this value.
Break at first line
tells the debugger should it break on the first line or not.
Max depth
, Max children
and Max data
settings control the amount of information
about variables is retrieved from Xdebug.
To start debugging, click the Start listening
button in the top left corner (shortcut: F1
).
pugdebug then listens to all connections on the Port
provided, and if the connection has
the IDE Key
matching with what is configured, it will start debugging the PHP request from
that connection.
In the case if there is already a debugging in progress, the new connection will be queued and once the debugging of the current connection is done, the new one will be debugged.
This allows pugdebug to debug multiple requests (think ajax).
Load a web project in a browser and start a HTTP debugging session.
pugdebug should pick up that request and display the index file of the web project, while stopping the execution on the first line.
Using the Run
(F5
), Over
(F6
), In
(F7
), Out
(F8
) continuation commands allows
stepping through the PHP code.
Setting breakpoints is possible by double clicking the line where a breakpoint is needed.
The correspoding line number should be highlighted and a new breakpoint should be listed in the breakpoint viewer (bottom right corner).
Double clicking the line with a breakpoint should remove that breakpoint.
The Stop
(F3
) action will stop debugging the current request and tell Xdebug to
stop further execution of the PHP script that is being debugged.
The Detach
(F4
) action will detach the debugger from the current request, which
allows to stop debugging but also let the PHP script finish as it normally would.
The Stop listening
(F2
) action will tell pugdebug to stop listening
to new incomming connections.
It is also possible to debug CLI scripts with pugdebug.
Start pugdebug as stated in the previous section, click Start listening
to
start listening to incomming connections and then in a new terminal type:
export XDEBUG_CONFIG="idekey=pugdebug"
(or whatever the xdebug.idekey
setting is set to) and then start
the PHP CLI script normally:
php script.php
pugdebug should pick up the debugging session and allow the script to be debugged.
There is a wiki page with simple examples of Xdebug configurations that should help with setting up Xdebug for remote debugging.
Setting up the development environment should be needed only when you want to help out with developing pugdebug itself. And for OS X as there are no current builds for it yet.
The main dependencies are Python 3.5, QT5.7, SIP4.9 and PyQt5.7.
There is a wiki page with instructions how to set up the development environment for Fedora, Ubuntu, Windows and OSX.
There is also a blog post about setting up a virtual environment on a Fedora that goes into bit more details.
Take a look at the issue tracker.
Contributions are more than welcome! Report bugs, tell me your ideas and needs, write code, test it on different platforms ...
There's a slack created for pugdebug.
If you would like access, open a new ticket.