The extension vscode-R-debugger adds debugging capabilities for the R programming language to Visual Studio Code and depends on the R package vscDebugger. For further R support in VS Code see e.g. vscode-R and R LSP.
The debugger includes the following features:
print
, cat
, message
, and str
that also print a link to the file and line where the text was printed.The latest version of the VS Code extension can be installed from the
marketplace.
After installing the extension, the R package can be installed using the command
r.debugger.updateRPackage
.
If this does not work, you can find the source code and compiled binaries on the
releases site.
The provided packages were built using the latest R release and might be incompatible with older R versions. In these cases it is necessary to build the package from code.
If you want to install a development version, the VS Code extension can be installed from the .vsix-files found
here.
To download the correct file, filter the commits by branch, select the latest commit,
and download the file r-debugger.vsix
under the caption "Artifacts".
To install the latest development version of the required R-package from GitHub, run
devtools::install_github("ManuelHentschel/vscDebugger")
or install from the artifacts found
here.
If your R path is neither in the Windows registry nor the PATH
environment variable, make sure to provide a valid path to the R executable in r.rpath.xxx
.
R Debugger
as debugger. With the default launch configuration, the debugger will start a new R session..GlobalEnv
.library(vscDebugger)
.vsc.listen()
"request":"attach"
, e.g.:{ "type": "R-Debugger", "request": "attach", "name": "Attach to R process" }
For a detailed explanation of possible launch config entries and other settings, see Configuration.
The debugger works as follows:
vscDebugger
is loaded.vscDebugger
to get info about the stack/variablesThe output of the R process is read and parsed as follows:
vscDebugger
is encoded as json and sent via a TCP socket.
These lines are parsed by the VS Code extension and not shown to the user.browser()
function is parsed and used to update the source file/line highlighted inside VS Code.
These lines are also hidden from the user.Packages can now be debugged using load_all
from pkgload
.
To do so, it is required to install pkgload
(part of devtools
).
By default, load_all
will be masked by a modified version that automatically sets breakpoints
in the loaded package and attaches the modified versions of print
, cat
, message
.
To always load a package when launching a debug session, you can specify an array of paths in the launch config entry "loadPackages"
.
This is done (for the currently opened package) in the example debug config "Debug R-Package"
.
Packages with a more complicated installation that might not be compatible with load_all
can also be debugged.
For this to work, the proper source information must be retained during the installation of the package
(check attr(attr(FUNCTION_NAME, 'srcref'), 'srcfile')
for some function from the package):
.tar.gz
)--with-keep.source
should be setdevtools::install(quick=FALSE, ...)
to compile the binaries and again with
devtools::install(quick=TRUE, ...)
to retain the source information.The packages that are being debugged then need to be specified in the launch config as follows:
"debuggedPackages": ["MyPackage"], ...
To overwrite the print
/cat
/message
functions for an individual package,
they need to be explicitly assigned somewhere in the package:
print <- print cat <- cat message <- message
This assignment can be overwritten by the debugger with
.vsc.print
/.vsc.cat
/.vsc.message
, but has no effect when not using the debugger.
For troubleshooting info, see Troubleshooting
This package is still under development. If you have problems, suggestions, bug fixes etc. feel free to open an issue or submit a pull request. Any feedback or support is appreciated! Special thanks to @tdeenes for providing the C code used in the R package, and @renkun-ken for his numerous contributions and feedback!
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