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README.md
VS Code - Debugger for Chrome
Debug your JavaScript code running in Google Chrome from VS Code.
A VS Code extension to debug your JavaScript code in the Google Chrome browser, or other targets that support the Chrome Debugging Protocol.
Supported features
- Setting breakpoints, including in source files when source maps are enabled
- Stepping, including with the buttons on the Chrome page
- The Locals pane
- Debugging eval scripts, script tags, and scripts that are added dynamically
- Watches
- Console
Unsupported scenarios
- Debugging web workers
- Any features that aren't script debugging.
Getting Started
To use this extension, you must first open the folder containing the project you want to work on.
Using the debugger
When your launch config is set up, you can debug your project! Pick a launch config from the dropdown on the Debug pane in Code. Press the play button or F5 to start.
Configuration
The extension operates in two modes - it can launch an instance of Chrome navigated to your app, or it can attach to a running instance of Chrome. Just like when using the Node debugger, you configure these modes with a .vscode/launch.json
file in the root directory of your project. You can create this file manually, or Code will create one for you if you try to run your project, and it doesn't exist yet.
Launch
Two example launch.json
configs. You must specify either file
or url
to launch Chrome against a local file or a url. If you use a url, set webRoot
to the directory that files are served from. This can be either an absolute path or a path relative to the workspace (the folder open in Code). It's used to resolve urls (like "http://localhost/app.js") to a file on disk (like "/users/me/project/app.js"), so be careful that it's set correctly.
{
"version": "0.1.0",
"configurations": [
{
"name": "Launch localhost with sourcemaps",
"type": "chrome",
"request": "launch",
"url": "http://localhost/mypage.html",
"webRoot": "${workspaceRoot}/app/files",
"sourceMaps": true
},
{
"name": "Launch index.html (without sourcemaps)",
"type": "chrome",
"request": "launch",
"file": "${workspaceRoot}/index.html"
},
]
}
If you want to use a different installation of Chrome, you can also set the "runtimeExecutable" field with a path to the Chrome app.
Attach
You must launch Chrome with remote debugging enabled in order for the extension to attach to it.
Windows
- Right click the Chrome shortcut, and select properties
- In the "target" field, append
--remote-debugging-port=9222
- Or in a command prompt, execute
<path to chrome>/chrome.exe --remote-debugging-port=9222
OS X
- In a terminal, execute
/Applications/Google\ Chrome.app/Contents/MacOS/Google\ Chrome --remote-debugging-port=9222
Linux
- In a terminal, launch
google-chrome --remote-debugging-port=9222
Launch Chrome and navigate to your page.
An example launch.json
config.
{
"version": "0.1.0",
"configurations": [
{
"name": "Attach with sourcemaps",
"type": "chrome",
"request": "attach",
"port": 9222,
"sourceMaps": true,
"url": "<url of the open browser tab, you wanna connect to"
},
{
"name": "Attach to url with files served from ./out",
"type": "chrome",
"request": "attach",
"port": 9222,
"url": "<url of the open browser tab, you wanna connect to",
"webRoot": "${workspaceRoot}/out"
}
]
}
Other targets
You can also theoretically attach to other targets that support the same Chrome Debugging protocol, such as Electron or Cordova. These aren't officially supported, but should work with basically the same steps. You can use a launch config by setting "runtimeExecutable"
to a program or script to launch, or an attach config to attach to a process that's already running. If Code can't find the target, you can always verify that it is actually available by navigating to http://localhost:<port>/json
in a browser. If you get a response with a bunch of JSON, and can find your target page in that JSON, then the target should be available to this extension.
Examples
See our wiki page for some configured example apps: Examples
Other optional launch config fields
diagnosticLogging
: When true, the adapter logs its own diagnostic info to the console, and to this file:~/.vscode/extensions/msjsdiag.debugger-for-chrome/vscode-chrome-debug.txt
. This is often useful info to include when filing an issue on GitHub.runtimeExecutable
: Workspace relative or absolute path to the runtime executable to be used. If not specified, Chrome will be used from the default install locationruntimeArgs
: Optional arguments passed to the runtime executableuserDataDir
: Can be set to a temp directory, then Chrome will use that directory as the user profile directory. If Chrome is already running when you start debugging with a launch config, then the new instance won't start in remote debugging mode. If you don't want to close the original instance, you can set this property and the new instance will correctly be in remote debugging mode.url
: Required for a 'launch' config. For an attach config, the debugger will search for a tab that has that URL. It can also contain wildcards, for example,"localhost:*/app"
will match either"http://localhost:123/app"
or"http://localhost:456/app"
, but not"http://stackoverflow.com"
.sourceMapPathOverrides
: A mapping of source paths from the sourcemap, to the locations of these sources on disk. Useful when the sourcemap isn't accurate or can't be fixed during the build process. The left hand side of the mapping is a pattern that can contain a wildcard, and will be tested against thesourceRoot
+sources
entry in the source map. If it matches, the source file will be resolved to the path on the right hand side, which should be an absolute path to the source file on disk. A couple mappings are applied by default, corresponding to the default configs for Webpack and Meteor -
"sourceMapPathOverrides": {
"webpack:///*": "${webRoot}/*", // Example: "webpack:///src/app.js" -> "/users/me/project/src/app.js"
"meteor://💻app/*": "${webRoot}/*" // Example: "meteor://💻app/main.ts" -> "c:/code/main.ts"
}
If you set sourceMapPathOverrides
in your launch config, that will override these defaults. ${workspaceRoot}
and ${webRoot}
can be used here. If you aren't sure what the left side should be, you can use the diagnosticLogging
option to see the contents of the sourcemap, or look at the paths of the sources in Chrome DevTools, or open your .js.map
file and check the values manually.
Ionic/gulp-sourcemaps note
Ionic and gulp-sourcemaps output a sourceRoot of "/source/"
by default. If you can't fix this via your build config, I suggest this setting:
"sourceMapPathOverrides": {
"/source/*": "${workspaceRoot}/*"
}
Troubleshooting
Cannot connect to the target: connect ECONNREFUSED 127.0.0.1:9222
This message means that the extension can't attach to Chrome, because Chrome wasn't launched in debug mode. Here are some things to try:
- If using a
launch
type config, close other running instances of Chrome - if Chrome is already running, the extension may not be able to attach, when using launch mode. Chrome can even stay running in the background when all its windows are closed, which will interfere - check the taskbar or kill the process if necessary. Or, set theuserDataDir
property to a temp directory. Chrome will read this and launch a new instance using a different profile than running instances. It can be convenient to set"userDataDir": "${workspaceRoot}/.vscode/chrome"
. - If using an
attach
type config, ensure that you launched Chrome using--remote-debugging-port=9222
. And if there was already a running instance, see the above. - Ensure that the
port
property matches the port on which Chrome is listening for remote debugging connections. This is9222
by default. Ensure nothing else is using this port, including your web server. If something else on your computer responds athttp://localhost:9222
, then set a different port. - If all else fails, try to navigate to
http://localhost:<port>/json
in a browser when you see this message - if there is no response, then something is wrong upstream of the extension. If there is a page of JSON returned, then ensure that theport
in the launch config matches the port in that url.
General things to try if you're having issues:
- Ensure
webRoot
is set correctly if needed - Look at your sourcemap config carefully. A sourcemap has a path to the source files, and this extension uses that path to find the original source files on disk. Check the
sourceRoot
andsources
properties in your sourcemap and make sure that they can be combined with thewebRoot
property in your launch config to build the correct path to the original source files. - This extension ignores sources that are inlined in the sourcemap - you may have a setup that works in Chrome Dev Tools, but not this extension, because the paths are incorrect, but Chrome Dev Tools are reading the inlined source content.
- Check the console for warnings that this extension prints in some cases when it can't attach
- Ensure the code in Chrome matches the code in Code. Chrome may cache an old version.
- If your breakpoints bind, but aren't hit, try refreshing the page. If you set a breakpoint in code that runs immediately when the page loads, you won't hit that breakpoint until you refresh the page.
- File a bug in this extension's GitHub repo. Set the "diagnosticLogging" field in your launch config and attach the logs when filing a bug. You can drag this file into the GitHub comment box:
~/.vscode/extensions/msjsdiag.debugger-for-chrome/vscode-chrome-debug.txt
.
=== This project has adopted the Microsoft Open Source Code of Conduct. For more information see the Code of Conduct FAQ or contact opencode@microsoft.com with any additional questions or comments.