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You can debug C# applications in Visual Studio Code using the Microsoft C# extension.
The C# extension along with C# Dev Kit provides multiple ways to run and debug your C# application.
To run and debug without C# Dev Kit, see Microsoft C# extension's GitHub page for documentation.
With the C# Dev Kit extension installed and no debug configurations available to select in the Debug view, you can start debugging your project by having a .cs
file opened and then pressing F5. The debugger will automatically find your project and start debugging. If you have multiple projects, it will prompt for which project you would like to start debugging.
You can also start a debugging session from the Run and Debug view from the side bar of VS Code. See more at Debugging in VS Code.
With the C# Dev Kit extension installed, there is a Debug context menu when you right-click on your project in the Solution Explorer.
There are three options:
With the C# Dev Kit extension installed, you can also start debugging from the Command Palette ⇧⌘P (Windows, Linux Ctrl+Shift+P) by using the Debug: Select and Start Debugging command.
Note: This adds a launch configuration entry to your debug dropdown list.
With the C# Dev Kit extension installed, you can create dynamic launch configurations. How you create them depends if your project has an existing launch.json
file.
If you have an existing launch.json
, you can go to the Debug view, select the dropdown, and select the C#
option. This should give you a selection of launch targets that you can add to your dropdown list. After selecting, you can hit F5 or Start Debugging with the newly generated configuration.
If you do not have a launch.json
in your project, you can add and access these dynamic configurations in the Show all automatic debug configurations in the Debug view.
You can remove the generated configurations with Command Palette ⇧⌘P (Windows, Linux Ctrl+Shift+P) and using the command Debug: Select and Start Debugging.
In the dropdown, it lists all your existing debug configurations. If you hover over the dynamic configurations, a clickable trashcan icon appears on the right. You can select that icon to remove the dynamic configuration.
When a .cs
file is open in the editor, run and debug options are accessible via the buttons located in the upper-right corner of the editor window. These actions will use the current file to query the project system and determine the associated project to launch.
The two options are:
Run project associated with this file
: This will launch your program with noDebug: true
with the debug adapter.Debug project associated with this file
: This will launch your program under the debugger.If you are using the C# Dev Kit, we recommend not using this option. However, if you have the need to modify the debug configuration directly, see Configuring launch.json for C# debugging.
You can attach to a C# process using with the Command Palette ⇧⌘P (Windows, Linux Ctrl+Shift+P) and running the Debug: Attach to a .NET 5+ or .NET Core process command.
There are many options and settings available to configure the debugger. You can use launchSettings.json
, VS Code User Settings to modify your debug options, or directly modify your launch.json
.
If you have launchSettings.json
from Visual Studio, you should see your profiles listed using Run from F5 or Run from Command Palette.
Refer to Configuring C# debugging for more details.
If you have settings that you wish to change while using the C# debugger, you can find these options under File > Preferences > Settings (⌘, (Windows, Linux Ctrl+,)) and searching for these options.
csharp.debug.stopAtEntry
- If true, the debugger should stop at the entry point of the target. This option defaults to false
.csharp.debug.console
- When launching console projects, indicates which console the target program should be launched into. Note: This option is only used for the 'dotnet' debug configuration type.
internalConsole
[Default] - VS Code's Debug Console. This mode allows you to see messages from both the debugger and the target program in one place. Refer to full documentation for more details.integratedTerminal
- VS Code's integrated terminal.externalTerminal
- External terminal that can be configured via user settings.csharp.debug.sourceFileMap
- Maps build-time paths to local source locations. All instances of build-time path will be replaced with the local source path. {\"<build-path>\":\"<local-source-path>\"}
csharp.debug.justMyCode
- When enabled (the default), the debugger only displays and steps into user code ("My Code"), ignoring system code and other code that is optimized or that does not have debugging symbols. More information.csharp.debug.requireExactSource
- Flag to require current source code to match the pdb. This option defaults to true
.csharp.debug.enableStepFiltering
- Flag to enable stepping over Properties and Operators. This option defaults to true
.csharp.debug.logging.exceptions
- Flag to determine whether exception messages should be logged to the output window. This option defaults to true
.csharp.debug.logging.moduleLoad
- Flag to determine whether module load events should be logged to the output window. This option defaults to true
.csharp.debug.logging.programOutput
- Flag to determine whether program output should be logged to the output window when not using an external console. This option defaults to true
.csharp.debug.logging.diagnosticsLog
- Various settings used to diagnose issues with the debugger.csharp.debug.logging.browserStdOut
- Flag to determine if stdout text from the launching the web browser should be logged to the output window. This option defaults to true
.csharp.debug.logging.elapsedTiming
- If true, engine logging includes adapterElapsedTime
and engineElapsedTime
properties to indicate the amount of time, in microseconds, that a request took. This option defaults to false
.csharp.debug.logging.threadExit
- Controls if a message is logged when a thread in the target process exits. This option defaults to false
.csharp.debug.logging.processExit
- Controls if a message is logged when the target process exits, or debugging is stopped. This option defaults to true
.csharp.debug.suppressJITOptimizations
- If true, when an optimized module (.dll compiled in the Release configuration) loads in the target process, the debugger asks the Just-In-Time compiler to generate code with optimizations disabled. More informationcsharp.debug.symbolOptions.searchPaths
- Array of symbol server URLs (example: http://MyExampleSymbolServer
) or directories (example: /build/symbols) to search for .pdb files. These directories will be searched in addition to the default locations next to the module and the path where the pdb was originally dropped to.csharp.debug.symbolOptions.searchMicrosoftSymbolServer
- If true
the Microsoft Symbol server (https://msdl.microsoft.com/download/symbols
) is added to the symbols search path. If unspecified, this option defaults to false
.csharp.debug.symbolOptions.searchNuGetOrgSymbolServer
- If true
the NuGet.org symbol server (https://symbols.nuget.org/download/symbols
) is added to the symbols search path. If unspecified, this option defaults to false
.csharp.debug.symbolOptions.cachePath
- Directory where symbols downloaded from symbol servers should be cached. If unspecified, on Windows the debugger defaults to %TEMP%\\SymbolCache
, and on Linux and macOS the debugger defaults to ~/.dotnet/symbolcache
.csharp.debug.symbolOptions.moduleFilter.mode
- Controls which of the two basic operating modes the module filter operates in.
loadAllButExcluded
- Load symbols for all modules unless the module is in the excludedModules
array.loadOnlyIncluded
- Do not attempt to load symbols for ANY module unless it is in the includedModules
array, or it is included through the includeSymbolsNextToModules
setting.csharp.debug.symbolOptions.moduleFilter.excludedModules
- Array of modules that the debugger should NOT load symbols for. Wildcards (example: MyCompany.*.dll) are supported. This property is ignored unless mode
is set to loadAllButExcluded
.csharp.debug.symbolOptions.moduleFilter.includedModules
- Array of modules that the debugger should load symbols for. Wildcards (example: MyCompany.*.dll) are supported. This property is ignored unless mode
is set to loadOnlyIncluded
.csharp.debug.symbolOptions.moduleFilter.includeSymbolsNextToModules
- If true, for any module NOT in the includedModules
array, the debugger will still check next to the module itself and the launching executable, but it will not check paths on the symbol search list. This option defaults to true
.
This property is ignored unless mode
is set to loadOnlyIncluded
csharp.debug.allowFastEvaluate
- When true (the default state), the debugger will attempt faster evaluation by simulating execution of simple properties and methods.csharp.experimental.debug.hotReload
- When true, the debugger will enable applying changes while debugging if the target application supports hot reload.csharp.debug.hotReloadOnSave
- When true (the default state), the debugger will automatically apply code changes when the file is saved.csharp.debug.hotReloadVerbosity
- Controls the logging verbosity for the C# Hot Reload Output window. It can be set from minimal
(default), detailed
or diagnostic
. It is recommended to increase the verbosity level if hot reload starts behaving unexpectedly.The C# Debugger supports various breakpoints, such as source line breakpoints, conditional breakpoints, and logpoints.
With the help of expression evaluation, the debugger also supports conditional breakpoint. You can set your breakpoint to break when expression evaluates to true.
The debugger also supports functional breakpoints. You can set your breakpoint to break on the specific function by clicking on the +
in the Breakpoints section of the Debug pane.
Logpoints (also known as Tracepoints in Visual Studio) allow you to send output to Debug Console without editing code. They're different from breakpoints because they don't stop the execution flow of your application.
To add a Logpoint, right-click in the far-left margin next to a line of code. Select Add Logpoint and type the message you want to log. Any expression between curly braces ('{' and '}') will be evaluated when the Logpoint is hit.
The following tokens are also supported in the log message:
Token | Description | Example Output |
---|---|---|
$FILEPOS | Current source file location | C:\sources\repos\Project\Program.cs:4 |
$FUNCTION | Current function name | Program.<Main>$ |
$ADDRESS | Current instruction | 0x00007FFF83A54001 |
$TID | Thread ID | 20668 |
$PID | Process ID | 10028 |
$TNAME | Thread name | <No Thread Name> |
$PNAME | Process name | C:\sources\repos\Project\bin\Debug\net7.0\console.exe |
$CALLER | Calling function name | void console.dll!Program.Foo() |
$CALLSTACK | Call stack | void console.dll!Program.Bar() void console.dll!Program.Foo() void console.dll!Program.<Main>$(string[] args) [External Code] |
$TICK | Tick count (from Windows GetTickCount) | 28194046 |
$HITCOUNT | Number of times this breakpoint has been hit | 5 |
A triggered breakpoint is a breakpoint that is automatically enabled once another breakpoint is hit. They can be very useful when diagnosing failure cases in code that happen only after a certain precondition.
Triggered breakpoints can be set by right-clicking on the glyph margin, selecting Add Triggered Breakpoint, and then choosing which other breakpoint enables the breakpoint.
The C# debugger supports configuration options for when the debugger stops when exceptions are thrown or caught. This is done through two different entries in the BREAKPOINTS section of the Run view:
Note that the BREAKPOINTS section will be missing these entries until the first time that the folder has been debugged with the C# debugger.
Checking All Exceptions will configure the debugger to stop when an exception is thrown. If Just My Code is enabled (which it is by default), the debugger will not break if an exception is internally thrown and caught in library code. However, if the exception is thrown in library code and returned to user code, the debugger will break.
Checking User-Unhandled Exceptions will configure the debugger to stop when an exception is caught in non-user code after having been thrown in user code or traveled through user code. Exceptions that become user-unhandled aren't always a bug in the process being debugged -- it could be that user code is implementing an API and is expected to raise an exception. In many cases there is an actual problem, so, by default, the debugger will stop when an exception becomes user-unhandled.
Both checkboxes support conditions to break on only selected exception types. To edit the condition, select the pencil icon (see image above) or right-click on the entry and invoke Edit Condition. The condition is a comma-separated list of exception types to break on, or if the list starts with '!', a list of exception types to ignore.
Examples conditions:
Example condition value | Result |
---|---|
System.NullReferenceException | This will only break on null reference exceptions. |
System.NullReferenceException, System.InvalidOperationException | This will break on both null reference exceptions and invalid operation exceptions. |
!System.Threading.Tasks.TaskCanceledException | This will break on all exceptions except for task canceled. |
!System.Threading.Tasks.TaskCanceledException, System.NotImplementedException | This will break on all exceptions except for task canceled and not implemented. |
The debugger also lets you evaluate expressions in the WATCH window as well as the Debug Console.
With the C# Dev Kit extension installed, the debugger allows you to apply C# code changes while debugging.
In order to enable Hot Reload, csharp.experimental.debug.hotReload
must be set to true, see User settings for more information. The Hot Reload session will only start if the target debugger engine supports applying code changes.
C# Dev Kit supports the "classic" Hot Reload experience, also known as Edit and Continue. You can apply code changes while debugging regardless if you are stopped at a breakpoint or the program is running.
As of November 2023, some features such as MetadataUpdateHandler
, which enables ASP.NET Core applications to automatically refresh the browser after a change is made, are not available yet. Applying code changes without debugging is also not supported.
The runtime added support for applying changes while debugging on Linux/macOS in .NET 8, so a runtime version of .NET 8+ is required when applying code changes for .NET apps running on these operating systems.
Application Type | Supports Hot Reload with C# Dev Kit | .NET 8+ Required |
---|---|---|
Console | ✅ | Linux/macOS Only |
Test Projects | ✅ | Linux/macOS Only |
Class Library Projects | ✅ | Linux/macOS Only |
ASP.NET Core | ⚠️* Currently only supports changes on .cs files |
Linux/macOS Only |
MAUI | ❌* Available soon | -- |
Unity | ❌ | -- |
See supported projects for more information on projects currently supported by C# Dev Kit. Also see the C# Dev Kit FAQ for more information on troubleshooting other unsupported scenarios.
Once a Hot Reload session starts and new changes are made, you can apply these changes to your application with any of the following actions:
Action | Explanation |
---|---|
Hot Reload Ctrl+Shift+Enter |
Apply code changes, available from the Debug Toolbar. |
Save File ⌘S (Windows, Linux Ctrl+S) |
Start applying code changes if csharp.debug.hotReloadOnSave is set to true. See User settings for more information. |
Continue / Step Over / Step Into / Step Out F5 / F10 / F11 / ⇧F11 (Windows, Linux Shift+F11) |
When changes were made while on a break state (for example, while stopped at a breakpoint), these commands will automatically apply them. |
Read on to find out about: