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Debugging
First of all, use a Debug
build. It is compiled with
-O0 -g
while the default Release
build is -O3
.
Enable logging and verbose mode when starting the server.
-log-file=/tmp/ccls.log -v=1
To figure out the compiler command line used to parse your source files:
- Find the line below
indexer* ... parse
. This is used be the indexer. - Find the line below
preamble ... create session for
. This is used for completion/diagnostics.
If there is some diagnostics problem, change the first argument to clang
, append -fsyntax-only
and run the command in a shell to reproduce.
You can find stderr output in:
-
LanguageClient-neovim:
/tmp/LanguageServer.log
(default) - Emacs lsp-mode:
*lsp-ccls stderr*
buffer. They will also go to*message*
buffer if(setq lsp-log-io t)
- VSCode: TODO
export CCLS_CRASH_RECOVERY=0
disables clang crash recovery. In case of
clangIndex issues, you will not see clang crashed
in the log file but get a
process crash. And if you attach a debugger before it crashes, you can get the
stack trace.
gdb --args /path/to/ccls -index=/path/to/project
On Linux:
# sysdig
sudo sysdig -As999 --unbuffered -p '%evt.type %proc.name %evt.buffer' "proc.exe contains ccls and fd.type=pipe" | egrep -v '^Content|^$'
# strace
strace -s999 -e read,write -fp $(pgrep -fn ccls)
To intercept early requests/responses, you can use a shell script wrapper
#!/bin/sh
exec strace -s999 -e read,write -o /tmp/strace.log -f path/to/ccls "$@"
To debug individual LSP requests, you can attach your debugger after ccls has
done indexing. However, for many other issues, such as project file loading
(project.cc
) and C/C++ parsing and indexing indexer.cc
, you need to set an
early breakpoint to be able to trace the code.
Export the environment variable CCLS_TRACEME=1
or CCLS_TRACEME=s
before starting ccls.
Consider using a shell script wrapper.
CCLS_TRACEME=1
or s
causes the ccls
process to SIGTSTP/SIGSTOP itself.
In another shell, gdb -p $(pgrep -fn ccls)
Insert an infinite loop volatile static int z=0;while(!z);
somewhere and
ccls will stop there. Attach to the ccls process with gdb -p $(pgrep -fn ccls)
. Set some breakpoints, use print
commands, and execute p z=1
for
continuing.
When setting breakpoints, if several threads may stop on the same breakpoint
(e.g. concurrent indexer threads), execute set scheduler-locking on
.
Cache files are deleted to avoid possible issues related to stale
cache. CCLS_TRACEME=1
causes the ccls process to stop at the start of
main()
. You may attach to the process with:
Use CCLS_TRACEME=s
to raise(SIGSTOP)
, if SIGTSTP
does not work.
-
gdb -p $(pgrep -fn ccls)
. Invokesignal SIGCONT
if you want ccls to continue running after detaching of gdb. -
lldb -p $(pgrep -fn ccls)
. Invokepro sig SIGCONT
when the process resumes (with ac
command) if you want ccls to continue running after detaching.
Set breakpoints in src/messages/*
files. They are inbound message handlers.