I want to set a breakpoint to line 111 in the script 'bootstrap-tokenfield.js' for debugging purpose as seen in the attached picture.
You can see the javascript is present in the resources.
Why chrome does not let me ?
You can put break point by viewing source from "Sources" tab of Developer tools in the chrome.
Just click on line number to add breakpoint
The debugger statement invokes any available debugging functionality, such as setting a breakpoint. If no debugging functionality is available, this statement has no effect.
Syntax
debugger;
The following example shows code where a debugger statement has been inserted, to invoke a debugger (if one exists) when the function is called.
function potentiallyBuggyCode() {
debugger;
// do potentially buggy stuff to examine, step through, etc.
}
When the debugger is invoked, execution is paused at the debugger statement. It is like a breakpoint in the script source.
Reference
https://developer.mozilla
keep the debugger on the function where you want to debug
Now open the Chrome and Open "Source" tab
Now try to reload the page and page will be appear in the Debug Mode
at that point.
I am trying to use the new feature of chrome devtools "blackboxing a script".
This Chrome Devtools article lists script blackboxing functionality
What happens when you blackbox a script?
Exceptions thrown from library code will not pause (if Pause on
exceptions is enabled)
Stepping into/out/over bypasses the library code
Event listener breakpoints don't break in library code
The debugger will not pause on any breakpoints set in library code.
The end result is you are debugging your application code instead of third party resources.
I have tried to blackbox the file directly by right clicking the file from source tab and everything goes right the yellow notification shows at the top of file "This script is blackboxed in debugger". Strangely none of the above listed points work, debugger goes through blackboxed script also event listeners reference the blackboxed script. I have also enabled Developer Tools experiments at chrome://flags/
With these options set i thought i would have been ok, i also have the latest chrome at this time 39.0 beta,i have no idea what i'm missing. Did anybody go through this?
Thnx!
I had the same issue. One quick and easy way is to look at your Call Stack. As a for instance, Right-Click on one of the 'jquery' functions and select 'black box' from the menu. Nothing else needed. In this example jquery.js will be step-over from that point on.
In your screenshot, I can see a breakpoint.
If you put a breakpoint, it will always break (except if you deactivate it, of course), even with blackboxing being active.
Had the same issue and used good old
have you tried turning it off and on again?
Go to developer tools settings -> Blackboxing -> Remove all entries one by one + disable Blackbox content scripts
Blackboxed again and after that this works fine.
When stepping through JavaScript code in Google Chrome debugger, how do I terminate script execution if I do not want to continue? The only way I found is closing the browser window.
Pressing "Reload this page" runs the rest of the code and even submits forms as if pressing F8 "Continue".
UPDATE:
When pressing F5 (Refresh) while a script is paused:
Google Chrome (v22) runs the script. If the script submits HTTP request, the HTTP response for that request is displayed. The original page is not refreshed.
IE 9 just freezes. However IE has an option "Stop Debugging" which, when pressed (provided you did not press F5 earlier), continues to run the script outside debugger.
Firebug behaves identically to Chrome.
Closing and then opening again the browser window is not always the next easiest way
because it will kill browser session state and that may be important. All your breakpoints are also lost.
UPDATE (Jan 2014):
Refresh while debugging:
Chrome v31: lets scripts to run and stops on further breakpoints (but does not submit ajax requests), then refreshes.
IE 11: refresh does nothing, but you can press F5 to continue.
Firefox v26: lets scripts to run but does not stop on further breakpoints, submits ajax requests, then refreshes.
Kind of progress!
Navigate to the same page while debugging:
Chrome v31: same as Refresh.
IE 11: scripts are terminated, new browser session is started (same as closing and opening again).
Firefox v26: nothing happens.
Also juacala suggested an effective workaround. For example, if you are using jQuery, running delete $ from console will stop execution once any jQuery method is encountered. I have tested it in all above browsers and can confirm it is working.
UPDATE (Mar 2015):
Finally, after over 2 years and almost 10K views, the right answer was given by Alexander K. Google Chrome has its own Task Manager which can kill a tab process without closing the tab itself, keeping all the breakpoints and other stuff intact.
I even went as far as BrowserStack.com to test it in Chrome v22 and found that this was working this way even at that time.
Juacala's workaround is still useful when debugging in IE or Firefox.
UPDATE (Jan 2019):
Chrome Dev Tools at last added a proper way to stop script execution which is nice (although a bit hidden). Refer to James Gentes's answer for details.
In Chrome, there is "Task Manager", accessible via Shift+ESC or through
Menu → More Tools → Task Manager
You can select your page task and end it by pressing "End Process" button.
As of April 2018, you can stop infinite loops in Chrome:
Open the Sources panel in Developer Tools (Ctrl+Shift+I**).
Click the Pause button to Pause script execution.
Also note the shortcut keys: F8 and Ctrl+\
2020 April update
As of Chrome 80, none of the current answers work. There is no visible "Pause" button - you need to long-click the "Play" button to access the Stop icon:
One way you can do it is pause the script, look at what code follows where you are currently stopped, e.g.:
var something = somethingElse.blah;
In the console, do the following:
delete somethingElse;
Then play the script: it will cause a fatal error when it tries to access somethingElse, and the script will die. Voila, you've terminated the script.
EDIT: Originally, I deleted a variable. That's not good enough. You have to delete a function or an object of which JavaScript attempts to access a property.
[2022 edit: this was reported as https://bugs.chromium.org/p/chromium/issues/detail?id=774852 and https://bugs.chromium.org/p/chromium/issues/detail?id=1112863 in 2017, and was just recently marked as fixed 5 years later, so if you are still experiencing this, you should update Chrome (and in general keep it updated). If you are experiencing this issue in 2023 or forward, it may be a different issue, a bug regression, etc.]
If you are encountering this while using the debugger statement,
debugger;
... then I think the page will continue running forever until the js runtime yields, or the next break. Assuming you're in break-on-error mode (the pause-icon toggle), you can ensure a break happens by instead doing something like:
debugger;throw 1;
or maybe call a non-existent function:
debugger;z();
(Of course this doesn't help if you are trying to step through functions, though perhaps you could dynamically add in a throw 1 or z() or somesuch in the Sources panel, ctrl-S to save, and then ctrl-R to refresh... this may however skip one breakpoint, but may work if you're in a loop.)
If you are doing a loop and expect to trigger the debugger statement again, you could just type throw 1 instead.
throw 1;
Then when you hit ctrl-R, the next throw will be hit, and the page will refresh.
(tested with Chrome v38, circa Apr 2017)
Refering to the answer given by #scottndecker to the following question, chrome now provides a 'disable JavaScript' option under Developer Tools:
Vertical ... in upper right (in Developer Tools menu, not in Chrome main menu)
Settings (in newer Chrome versions it is visible separately as a cogwheel besides the ... button, not under it)
And under 'Preferences' go to the 'Debugger' section at the very bottom and select 'Disable JavaScript'
Good thing is you can stop and rerun again just by checking/unchecking it.
Good question here. I think you cannot terminate the script execution. Although I have never looked for it, I have been using the chrome debugger for quite a long time at work. I usually set breakpoints in my javascript code and then I debug the portion of code I'm interested in. When I finish debugging that code, I usually just run the rest of the program or refresh the browser.
If you want to prevent the rest of the script from being executed (e.g. due to AJAX calls that are going to be made) the only thing you can do is to remove that code in the console on-the-fly, thus preventing those calls from being executed, then you could execute the remaining code without problems.
I hope this helps!
P.S: I tried to find out an option for terminating the execution in some tutorials / guides like the following ones, but couldn't find it. As I said before, probably there is no such option.
http://www.codeproject.com/Articles/273129/Beginner-Guide-to-Page-and-Script-Debugging-with-C
http://www.nsbasic.com/app/tutorials/TT10.htm
You can pause on any XHR pattern which I find very useful during debugging these kind of scenarios.
For example I have given breakpoint on an URL pattern containing "/"
If you have a rogue loop, pause the code in Google Chrome debugger (the small "||" button while in Sources tab).
Switch back to Chrome itself, open "Task Manager" (Shift+ESC), select your tab, click the "End Process" button.
You will get the Aww Snap message and then you can reload (F5).
As others have noted, reloading the page at the point of pausing is the same as restarting the rogue loop and can cause nasty lockups if the debugger also then locks (in some cases leading to restarting chrome or even the PC). The debugger needs a "Stop" button. Nb: The accepted answer is out of date in that some aspects of it are now apparently wrong. If you vote me down, pls explain :).
Go to the Sources tab and select Filesystem subTab
Select a folder, containing the file you execute
Accept folder access recuest
Select the file you execute
Put a breakpoint inside the file you execute
Click the "Pause script execution option"
Select the copy link address option in the RMB context menu
Paste the copied address into the browser address bar to open the file
File execution will be stopped at the breakpoint
Open the source tab in 'Developer Tools', click on a line number in a script that is running, this will create a breakpoint and the debugger will break there.
There are many appropiate solution to this problem as mentioned above in this post, but i have found a small hack that can be inserrted in the script or pasted in the Chromes console (debugger) to achieve it:
jQuery(window).keydown(function(e) { if (e.keyCode == 123) debugger; });
This will cause execution to be paused when you hit F12.
In some places, when I set a breakpoint, Firebug not hits breakpoints even if the code is executing. In the specific case bellow, I know that the code is executing because I write an alert that is displayed.
As you can see in the screenshot, it's not because the line don't have a line number in green.
Is there any reason why Firebug would not stop to the breakpoint even if code is executing?
Edit 14-08-2012 09:23
After been helped by some comments, I tried to add a statement "debugger" and Firebug have been stoped but instead of breaking in my javascript, it breaks into a strange file that you can see bellow. What are these files?
Just for the information, the file named "9" is my javascript but minified.
Thank you for the help.
It can happen if there's asynchronicity involved (for example, you hit one breakpoint, and before it, you invoked setTimeout).
Since your function is called eventCreateOnSuccess, I guess it's an asynchronous callback.
See my answer in the other thread:
https://stackoverflow.com/a/11834880/245966
Have you put the breakpoint only in this one line, or also in some other lines, which are executed before it? If the former, try disabling all the breakpoints, and enable only this one - it should work fine then. Otherwise, it's really strange.
I experienced this issue because I was using source maps. Breakpoints set in source maps files do not trigger (unlike in Chrome). To disable source maps in Firefox, click on Gear icon in the top right corner of Firefox Dev tool, then unselect Show Original Sources. Then, set your breakpoints in original JS files.
See screenshot
I recently switched from Firefox to Chrome and I (probably) missed an important feature. I was used to test javascript snippets on FF from within the Firebug console this way: open the console, write the script and finally press CTRL + Return to execute the code.
It seems not possible to do the same in Chrome console, as when I type some code there and press return to start a new line the code is executed immediatly.
Is there a way to replicate the Firefox behavior on Chrome?
Thanks.
It seems that there is no explicit “multiline mode”.
But you can:
Paste code (it will preserve multiline)
Shift + Return to add a new line without executing the script
Related bugs:
https://bugs.webkit.org/show_bug.cgi?id=30553
http://code.google.com/p/chromium/issues/detail?id=72739
You can also hit Shift + Enter to start a new line without running the code in Chrome's console: https://developers.google.com/chrome-developer-tools/docs/tips-and-tricks#multiline-commands
Install Firebug Lite for Google Chrome. It has got a console.
Don't look for a full fledged Firebug. You will be disappointed :)
Oops,I didn't read properly at first. My bad!
In Firebug Lite, take Console. Then you will see a tiny red up-arrow at the right corner.
Click on it and you will get a multi-line console. Won't you?
I recommend this:
Write debugger; and hit Enter, in the console tab
This takes you to the Sources tab; if not, make sure debugger breakpoints are active
Now you can write whatever you want in the Sources tab, which acts like a full IDE with features like newline and indentation
Select any part of your code to run, and right-click, choose Evaluate in console
Better way of doing this using Chrome featue i.e Snippets where you can write javascript and save it in chrome developer console.
Its available underneath source inside developers tools while inspecting element.
More info about the snippets can be find on this link.
It was available in Chrome canary and I guess now it is available in default chrome browser also.