Awesome
<div align="center"> <picture> <source media="(prefers-color-scheme: dark)" srcset="docs/src/assets/logo-dark.svg"> <source media="(prefers-color-scheme: light)" srcset="docs/src/assets/logo.svg"> <img alt="Infiltrator Logo" src="docs/src/assets/logo.svg" width="150px"> </picture> </div>Infiltrator.jl
This packages provides the @infiltrate
macro, which acts as a breakpoint with negligible runtime
performance overhead.
Note that you cannot access other function scopes or step into further calls. Use an actual debugger if you need that level of flexibility.
Running code that ends up triggering the @infiltrate
REPL mode via inline evaluation in VS Code
or Juno can cause issues, so it's recommended to always use the REPL directly.
@infiltrate
@infiltrate
@infiltrate condition::Bool
@infiltrate
sets an infiltration point.
When the infiltration point is hit, it will drop you into an interactive REPL session that lets you inspect local variables and the call stack as well as execute arbitrary statements in the context of the current local and global scope.
The optional argument cond
only enables this infiltration point if it evaluates to true
, e.g.
@infiltrate false # does not infiltrate
You can also use
if isdefined(Main, :Infiltrator)
Main.infiltrate(@__MODULE__, Base.@locals, @__FILE__, @__LINE__)
end
to infiltrate package code without any post-hoc evaluation into the module (because the functional form does not require Infiltrator to be loaded at compiletime).
The safehouse
Exfiltrating variables (with @exfiltrate
or by assignment in an @infiltrate
session) happens by
assigning the variable to a global storage space (backed by a module); any exfiltrated objects
can be directly accessed, via Infiltrator.store
or its exported aliases safehouse
or exfiltrated
:
julia> foo(x) = @exfiltrate
foo (generic function with 1 method)
julia> foo(3)
julia> safehouse.x # or exfiltrated.x
3
You can reset the safehouse with Infiltrator.clear_store!()
.
You can also assign a specific module with Infiltrator.set_store!(mod)
. This allows you to e.g. set the
backing module to Main
and therefore export the contents of the safehouse to the global namespace
(although doing so is not recommended).
Usage
Scripts and package development
Using Infiltrator for debugging packages or scripts requires a little bit of setup.
- Either your current environment or an environment futher down the environment stack must contain Infiltrator.jl. I would recommend putting Infiltrator.jl into your global
@v1.xx
environment so that it is always available. - Load Revise.jl or use VS Code's inline evaluation to seamlessly update your package code.
- Load your package.
- Add
Main.@infiltrate
statements as breakpoints wherever desired. - Run a function that ends up executing the method containing the breakpoint.
The ordering of steps 3 and 4 is important: loading your package after adding Main.@infiltrate
statements will
prevent if from loading, because that macro does not exist during precompilation.
If you absolutely cannot modfiy your code after loading it initially, then the infiltrate
function can be used
instead. An advantage of the macro form is that it will fail tests, so you don't end up committing or merging code
containing infiltration points.
REPL session
julia> function f(x)
out = []
for i in x
push!(out, 2i)
@infiltrate
end
out
end
f (generic function with 1 method)
julia> f([1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10])
Infiltrating f(x::Vector{Int64})
at REPL[10]:5
infil> ?
Code entered here is evaluated in the current scope. Changes to local variables are not possible; global variables can only be changed with eval/@eval.
All assignments will end up in the safehouse.
The following commands are special cased:
• ?: Print this help text.
• @trace: Print the current stack trace.
• @locals: Print local variables. @locals x y only prints x and y.
• @exception: Print the exception that triggered the current @infiltry session, if any.
• @exfiltrate: Save all local variables into the store. @exfiltrate x y saves x and y; this variant can also exfiltrate variables defined in the infil> REPL.
• @toggle: Toggle infiltrating at this @infiltrate spot (clear all with Infiltrator.clear_disabled!()).
• @cond expr: Infiltrate at this @infiltrate spot only if <expr> evaluates to true (clear all with
Infiltrator.clear_conditions!()).
• @continue: Continue to the next infiltration point or exit (shortcut: Ctrl-D).
• @doc symbol: Get help for symbol (same as in the normal Julia REPL).
• @exit: Stop infiltrating for the remainder of this session and exit (on Julia versions prior to 1.5 this needs to be manually cleared with Infiltrator.end_session!()).
infil> @locals
- out::Vector{Any} = Any[2]
- i::Int64 = 1
- x::Vector{Int64} = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10]
infil> 0//0
ERROR: ArgumentError: invalid rational: zero(Int64)//zero(Int64)
Stacktrace:
[1] __throw_rational_argerror_zero(T::Type)
@ Base ./rational.jl:32
[2] Rational{Int64}(num::Int64, den::Int64)
@ Base ./rational.jl:34
[3] Rational
@ ./rational.jl:39 [inlined]
[4] //(n::Int64, d::Int64)
@ Base ./rational.jl:62
[5] top-level scope
@ none:1
infil> @toggle
Disabled infiltration at this infiltration point.
infil> @toggle
Enabled infiltration at this infiltration point.
infil> @cond i > 5
Conditionally enabled infiltration at this infiltration point.
infil> @continue
Infiltrating f(x::Vector{Int64})
at REPL[10]:5
infil> i
6
infil> intermediate = copy(out)
6-element Vector{Any}:
2
4
6
8
10
12
infil> @exfiltrate intermediate x
Exfiltrating 2 local variables into the safehouse.
infil> @exit
10-element Vector{Any}:
2
4
6
8
10
12
14
16
18
20
julia> safehouse.intermediate
6-element Vector{Any}:
2
4
6
8
10
12
julia> @withstore begin
x = 23
x .* intermediate
end
6-element Vector{Int64}:
46
92
138
184
230
276
Advanced
Auto-loading Infiltrator.jl
Infiltrator loads very fast (~3ms on my machine) and is generally safe to load in startup.jl
.
If, for whatever reason, you do not want to unconditionally load Infiltrator in your startup.jl
,
you can use the following convenience macro instead. It will automatically load
Infiltrator.jl (if it is in your environment stack) and subsequently call @infiltrate
:
macro autoinfiltrate(cond=true)
pkgid = Base.PkgId(Base.UUID("5903a43b-9cc3-4c30-8d17-598619ec4e9b"), "Infiltrator")
if !haskey(Base.loaded_modules, pkgid)
try
Base.eval(Main, :(using Infiltrator))
catch err
@error "Cannot load Infiltrator.jl. Make sure it is included in your environment stack."
end
end
i = get(Base.loaded_modules, pkgid, nothing)
lnn = LineNumberNode(__source__.line, __source__.file)
if i === nothing
return Expr(
:macrocall,
Symbol("@warn"),
lnn,
"Could not load Infiltrator.")
end
return Expr(
:macrocall,
Expr(:., i, QuoteNode(Symbol("@infiltrate"))),
lnn,
esc(cond)
)
end