views:

1802

answers:

4

I found a lot of info about how to debug simple Python programs with Emacs. But what if I want to debug a Django application? I run the development server and I would like to somehow attach to the process from Emacs and then set breakpoints, etc. Similar to Visual Studio's "attach to process". How to do that?

+1  A: 

I don't really know anything about it, but putting "debugging Python with emacs" into Google gave me this page about debugging twisted with emacs, so it seems to be possible.

Ned Batchelder
+11  A: 

This isn't emacs specific, but you can use the Python debugger by adding the following to a Django view function:

import pdb; pdb.set_trace()

Now when you run the development server and view the page, your browser will appear to hang or load very slowly - switch over to your console, and you have access to the full debugger. You can inspect AND modify state of your application via an interactive shell - check out the Python documentation for the debugger, or this link for some Python debugging examples


If all you need is logging, add the following to your settings.py:

logging.basicConfig(
    level = logging.DEBUG,
    format = '%(asctime)s %(levelname)s %(message)s',
    filename = '/tmp/mylog.log',
    filemode = 'w'
)

Now you can log messages to /tmp/mylog.log by adding the following to any view function:

import logging
logging.debug("Something happened")
Ben
+3  A: 

Here's something I found last night that will do exactly what you want when the program crashes:

http://code.google.com/p/django-command-extensions/

Once you install that you can run: python manage.py runserver_plus and you will have an interactive AJAX console on your Error page. (Obviously, be careful with the amount of access people have to this web server when running in that mode.)

Chad
+4  A: 

Start pdb like this:

M-x pdb
python manage.py runserver --noreload

Once you have the (Pdb) prompt, you need to do this:

import sys
sys.path.append('/path/to/directory/containing/views.py')

Once you've done this, you should be able to set breakpoints normally. Just navigate to the line number you want, and

M-x space
Matthew Talbert