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Node Inspector

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Overview

Node Inspector is a debugger interface for Node.js applications that uses the Blink Developer Tools (formerly WebKit Web Inspector).

Since version 6.3, Node.js provides a built-in DevTools-based debugger which mostly deprecates Node Inspector, see e.g. this blog post to get started. The built-in debugger is developed directly by the V8/Chromium team and provides certain advanced features (e.g. long/async stack traces) that are too difficult to implement in Node Inspector.

Table of Content

Quick Start

Install

$ npm install -g node-inspector

Start

$ node-debug app.js

where app.js is the name of your main Node application JavaScript file.

See available configuration options here

Debug

The node-debug command will load Node Inspector in your default browser.

NOTE: Node Inspector works in Chrome and Opera only. You have to re-open the inspector page in one of those browsers if another browser is your default web browser (e.g. Safari or Internet Explorer).

Node Inspector works almost exactly as the Chrome Developer Tools. Read the excellent DevTools overview to get started.

Other useful resources:

Features

The Blink DevTools debugger is a powerful JavaScript debugger interface. Node Inspector supports almost all of the debugging features of DevTools, including:

Cool stuff

Known Issues

Troubleshooting

My script runs too fast to attach the debugger.

The debugged process must be started with --debug-brk, this way the script is paused on the first line.

Note: node-debug adds this option for you by default.

I got the UI in a weird state.

When in doubt, refresh the page in browser

Can I debug remotely?

Yes. Node Inspector must be running on the same machine, but your browser can be anywhere. Just make sure port 8080 is accessible.

And if Node Inspector is not running on your remote machine, you can also debug it as long as your local machine can connect it. In this way, you must launch Node Inspector with --no-inject which means some features are not supported such as profiling and consoling output inspection.

So how to debug remote machine with your local Node Inspector?

option 1

$ node-inspector --debug-host 192.168.0.2 --no-inject then open the url http://127.0.0.1:8080/debug?port=5858

option 2

$ node-inspector --no-inject then specify the remote machine address as a host parameter in the url e.g.) http://127.0.0.1:8080/debug?host=192.168.123.12&port=5858

How do I specify files to hide?

Create a JSON-encoded array. You must escape quote characters when using a command-line option.

$ node-inspector --hidden='["node_modules/framework"]'

Note that the array items are interpreted as regular expressions.

UI doesn't load or doesn't work and refresh didn't help

Make sure that you have adblock disabled as well as any other content blocking scripts and plugins.

How can I (selectively) delete debug session metadata?

You may want to delete debug session metadata if for example Node Inspector gets in a bad state with some watch variables that were function calls (possibly into some special c-bindings). In such cases, even restarting the application/debug session may not fix the problem.

Node Inspector stores debug session metadata in the HTML5 local storage. You can inspect the contents of local storage and remove any items as needed. In Google Chrome, you can execute any of the following in the JavaScript console:

// Remove all
window.localStorage.clear()
// Or, to list keys so you can selectively remove them with removeItem()
window.localStorage
// Remove all the watch expressions
window.localStorage.removeItem('watchExpressions')
// Remove all the breakpoints
window.localStorage.removeItem('breakpoints')

When you are done cleaning up, hit refresh in the browser.

Node Inspector takes a long time to start up.

Try setting --no-preload to true. This option disables searching disk for *.js at startup. Code will still be loaded into Node Inspector at runtime, as modules are required.

How do I debug Mocha unit-tests?

You have to start _mocha as the debugged process and make sure the execution pauses on the first line. This way you have enough time to set your breakpoints before the tests are run.

$ node-debug _mocha

How do I debug Gulp tasks?

If you are running on a Unix system you can simply run the following command. The $(which ..) statement gets replaced with the full path to the gulp-cli.

$ node-debug $(which gulp) task

If you are running on Windows, you have to get the full path of gulp.js to make an equivalent command:

> node-debug %appdata%\npm\node_modules\gulp\bin\gulp.js task

You can omit the task part to run the default task.

Advanced Use

While running node-debug is a convenient way to start your debugging session, there may come time when you need to tweak the default setup.

There are three steps needed to get you up and debugging:

1. Start the Node Inspector server

$ node-inspector

You can leave the server running in background, it's possible to debug multiple processes using the same server instance.

2. Enable debug mode in your Node process

You can either start Node with a debug flag like:

$ node --debug your/node/program.js

or, to pause your script on the first line:

$ node --debug-brk your/short/node/script.js

Or you can enable debugging on a node that is already running by sending it a signal:

  1. Get the PID of the node process using your favorite method. pgrep or ps -ef are good

    $ pgrep -l node
    2345 node your/node/server.js
    
  2. Send it the USR1 signal

    $ kill -s USR1 2345
    
Windows

Windows does not support UNIX signals. To enable debugging, you can use an undocumented API function process._debugProcess(pid):

  1. Get the PID of the node process using your favorite method, e.g.

    > tasklist /FI "IMAGENAME eq node.exe"
    
    Image Name                     PID Session Name        Session#    Mem Usage
    ========================= ======== ================ =========== ============
    node.exe                      3084 Console                    1     11,964 K
    
  2. Call the API:

    > node -e "process._debugProcess(3084)"
    

3. Load the debugger UI

Open http://127.0.0.1:8080/?port=5858 in the Chrome browser.

Configuration

Both node-inspector and node-debug use rc module to manage configuration options.

Places for configuration:

All configuration sources that where found will be flattened into one object, so that sources earlier in this list override later ones.

Options

OptionAliasDefaultDescription
general
--help-hDisplay information about available options.<br/>Use --help -l to display full usage info.<br/>Use --help <option> to display quick help on option.
--version-vDisplay Node Inspector's version.
--debug-port-d5858Node/V8 debugger port.<br/>(node --debug={port})
--web-host0.0.0.0Host to listen on for Node Inspector's web interface.<br/>node-debug listens on 127.0.0.1 by default.
--web-port-p8080Port to listen on for Node Inspector's web interface.
node-debug
--debug-brk-btrueBreak on the first line.<br/>(node --debug-brk)
--nodejs[]Pass NodeJS options to debugged process.<br/>(node --option={value})
--script[]Pass options to debugged process.<br/>(node app --option={value})
--cli-cfalseCLI mode, do not open browser.
node-inspector
--save-live-editfalseSave live edit changes to disk (update the edited files).
--preloadtruePreload *.js files. You can disable this option<br/>to speed up the startup.
--injecttrueEnable injection of debugger extensions into the debugged process. It's possible disable only part of injections using subkeys --no-inject.network. Allowed keys : network, profiles, console.
--hidden[]Array of files to hide from the UI,<br/>breakpoints in these files will be ignored.<br/>All paths are interpreted as regular expressions.
--stack-trace-limit50Number of stack frames to show on a breakpoint.
--ssl-keyPath to file containing a valid SSL key.
--ssl-certPath to file containing a valid SSL certificate.

Usage examples

Command line

Format
$ node-debug [general-options] [node-debug-options] [node-inspector-options] [script]
$ node-inspector [general-options] [node-inspector-options]
Usage

Display full usage info:

$ node-debug --help -l

Set debug port of debugging process to 5859:

$ node-debug -p 5859 app

Pass --web-host=127.0.0.2 to node-inspector. Start node-inspector to listen on 127.0.0.2:

$ node-debug --web-host 127.0.0.2 app

Pass --option=value to debugging process:

$ node-debug app --option value

Start node-inspector to listen on HTTPS:

$ node-debug --ssl-key ./ssl/key.pem --ssl-cert ./ssl/cert.pem app

Ignore breakpoints in files stored in node_modules folder or ending in .test.js:

$ node-debug --hidden node_modules/ --hidden \.test\.js$ app

Add --harmony flag to the node process running the debugged script:

$ node-debug --nodejs --harmony app

Disable preloading of .js files:

$ node-debug --no-preload app

RC Configuration

Use dashed option names in RC files. Sample config file (to be saved as .node-inspectorrc):

{
  "web-port": 8088,
  "web-host": "0.0.0.0",
  "debug-port": 5858,
  "save-live-edit": true,
  "preload": false,
  "hidden": ["\.test\.js$", "node_modules/"],
  "nodejs": ["--harmony"],
  "stack-trace-limit": 50,
  "ssl-key": "./ssl/key.pem",
  "ssl-cert": "./ssl/cert.pem"
}

Contributing Code

Making Node Inspector the best debugger for node.js cannot be achieved without the help of the community. The following resources should help you to get started.

Credits

Current maintainers

Alumni

Contributors

Big thanks to the many contributors to the project, see Contributors on GitHub