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Ruby gem for beautiful backtraces

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ivoanjo/backtracie

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backtracie

A Ruby gem for beautiful backtraces.

Aims to offer alternatives to Thread#backtrace, Thread#backtrace_locations, Kernel#caller and Kernel#caller_locations with similar (or better!?) performance, but with better metadata (such as class names).

Warning
⚠️ This gem is currently an exploration ground for the use of low-level techniques to get at internal Ruby VM structures. Due to the way it works, bugs can easily cause your whole Ruby VM to crash; Please take this into account if you plan on using this gem. Still, contributions and bug reports are mega welcome, and I hope to one day be able to remove this warning ⚠️.

Contributor Covenant Gem Version CI Status

Contents

Installation

Add this line to your application’s gems.rb or Gemfile:

gem 'backtracie'

And then execute:

$ bundle install

Or install it yourself as:

$ gem install backtracie

This gem is versioned according to Semantic Versioning.

Usage

Currently, backtracie exposes two APIs:

  • Backtracie.backtrace_locations(thread): Returns an array representing the backtrace of the given thread. Similar to Thread#backtrace_locations.

  • Backtracie.caller_locations: Returns an array representing the backtrace of the current thread, starting from the caller of the current method. Similar to Kernel#caller_locations.

These methods, inspired by their original Ruby counterparts, return arrays of Backtracie::Location items. These items return A LOT more information than Ruby usually exposes:

$ bundle exec pry
[1] pry(main)> require 'backtracie'

[2] pry(main)> class Example
[2] pry(main)*   def foo
[2] pry(main)*     bar
[2] pry(main)*   end
[2] pry(main)*   def bar
[2] pry(main)*     Backtracie.caller_locations.first
[2] pry(main)*   end
[2] pry(main)* end

[3] pry(main)> Example.new.foo
=> #<Backtracie::Location:0x0000561b236c9208
 @absolute_path="(pry)",
 @base_label="foo",
 @debug=
  {:ruby_frame?=>true,
   :should_use_iseq=>false,
   :should_use_cfunc_name=>false,
   :vm_method_type=>0,
   :line_number=>3,
   :called_id=>:foo,
   :defined_class_refinement?=>false,
   :self_class=>Example,
   :real_class=>Example,
   :self=>#<Example:0x0000561b236f3a08>,
   :self_class_singleton?=>false,
   :iseq_is_block?=>false,
   :iseq_is_eval?=>false,
   :cfunc_name=>nil,
   :iseq=>
    {:path=>"(pry)",
     :absolute_path=>"(pry)",
     :label=>"foo",
     :base_label=>"foo",
     :full_label=>"foo",
     :first_lineno=>2,
     :classpath=>nil,
     :singleton_method_p=>false,
     :method_name=>"foo",
     :qualified_method_name=>"foo"},
   :callable_method_entry=>
    {:path=>"(pry)",
     :absolute_path=>"(pry)",
     :label=>"foo",
     :base_label=>"foo",
     :full_label=>"Example#foo",
     :first_lineno=>2,
     :classpath=>"Example",
     :singleton_method_p=>false,
     :method_name=>"foo",
     :qualified_method_name=>"Example#foo"}},
 @label="foo",
 @lineno=3,
 @path="(pry)",
 @qualified_method_name="Example#foo">

This information can be used to to create much richer stack traces than the ones exposed by Ruby, including details such as class and module names, if methods are singletons, etc.

Development

After checking out the repo, run bundle install to install dependencies. Then, run rake spec to run the tests.

To open a console with the gem loaded, run bundle console.

To install this gem onto your local machine, run bundle exec rake install. To release a new version, update the version number in version.rb, and then run bundle exec rake release, which will create a git tag for the version, push git commits and tags, and push the .gem file to rubygems.org.

To test on specific Ruby versions you can use docker. E.g. to test on Ruby 2.6, use docker-compose run ruby-2.6. To test on all rubies using docker, you can use bundle exec rake test-all.

Feedback and success stories

Your feedback is welcome!

Contributing

Bug reports and pull requests are welcome at https://github.com/ivoanjo/backtracie.

This project is intended to be a safe, welcoming space for collaboration, and contributors are expected to adhere to the Contributor Covenant code of conduct.

Maintained with ❤️ by Ivo Anjo.

Code of Conduct

Everyone interacting in the backtracie project’s codebases, issue trackers, chat rooms and mailing lists is expected to follow the code of conduct.

Here’s some gems that are doing similar things to backtracie:

Other interesting links on this matter:

My blog posts on better backtraces:

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Ruby gem for beautiful backtraces

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