Provided by: libcoro-perl_6.570-2build1_amd64 bug

NAME

       Coro::Debug - various functions that help debugging Coro programs

SYNOPSIS

        use Coro::Debug;

        our $server = new_unix_server Coro::Debug "/tmp/socketpath";

        $ socat readline unix:/tmp/socketpath

DESCRIPTION

       This module is an AnyEvent user, you need to make sure that you use and run a supported
       event loop.

       This module provides some debugging facilities. Most will, if not handled carefully,
       severely compromise the security of your program, so use it only for debugging (or take
       other precautions).

       It mainly implements a very primitive debugger that is very easy to integrate in your
       program:

          our $server = new_unix_server Coro::Debug "/tmp/somepath";
          # see new_unix_server, below, for more info

       It lets you list running coroutines:

                   state (rUnning, Ready, New or neither)
                   |cctx allocated
                   ||  resident set size (octets)
                   ||  |   scheduled this many times
          > ps     ||  |   |
               PID SC  RSS USES Description              Where
          14572344 UC  62k 128k [main::]                 [dm-support.ext:47]
          14620056 -- 2260   13 [coro manager]           [Coro.pm:358]
          14620128 -- 2260  166 [unblock_sub scheduler]  [Coro.pm:358]
          17764008 N-  152    0 [EV idle process]        -
          13990784 -- 2596  10k timeslot manager         [cf.pm:454]
          81424176 --  18k 4758 [async pool idle]        [Coro.pm:257]
          23513336 -- 2624    1 follow handler           [follow.ext:52]
          40548312 --  15k 5597 player scheduler         [player-scheduler.ext:13]
          29138032 -- 2548  431 music scheduler          [player-env.ext:77]
          43449808 -- 2260 3493 worldmap updater         [item-worldmap.ext:115]
          33352488 --  19k 2845 [async pool idle]        [Coro.pm:257]
          81530072 --  13k  43k map scheduler            [map-scheduler.ext:65]
          30751144 --  15k 2204 [async pool idle]        [Coro.pm:257]

       Lets you do backtraces on about any coroutine:

          > bt 18334288
          coroutine is at /opt/cf/ext/player-env.ext line 77
                  eval {...} called at /opt/cf/ext/player-env.ext line 77
                  ext::player_env::__ANON__ called at -e line 0
                  Coro::_run_coro called at -e line 0

       Or lets you eval perl code:

          > 5+7
          12

       Or lets you eval perl code within other coroutines:

          > eval 18334288 caller(1); $DB::args[0]->method
          1

       It can also trace subroutine entry/exits for most coroutines (those not having recursed
       into a C function), resulting in output similar to:

          > loglevel 5
          > trace 94652688
          2007-09-27Z20:30:25.1368 (5) [94652688] enter Socket::sockaddr_in with (8481,\x{7f}\x{00}\x{00}\x{01})
          2007-09-27Z20:30:25.1369 (5) [94652688] leave Socket::sockaddr_in returning (\x{02}\x{00}...)
          2007-09-27Z20:30:25.1370 (5) [94652688] enter Net::FCP::Util::touc with (client_get)
          2007-09-27Z20:30:25.1371 (5) [94652688] leave Net::FCP::Util::touc returning (ClientGet)
          2007-09-27Z20:30:25.1372 (5) [94652688] enter AnyEvent::Impl::Event::io with (AnyEvent,fh,GLOB(0x9256250),poll,w,cb,CODE(0x8c963a0))
          2007-09-27Z20:30:25.1373 (5) [94652688] enter Event::Watcher::__ANON__ with (Event,poll,w,fd,GLOB(0x9256250),cb,CODE(0x8c963a0))
          2007-09-27Z20:30:25.1374 (5) [94652688] enter Event::io::new with (Event::io,poll,w,fd,GLOB(0x9256250),cb,CODE(0x8c963a0))
          2007-09-27Z20:30:25.1375 (5) [94652688] enter Event::Watcher::init with (Event::io=HASH(0x8bfb120),HASH(0x9b7940))

       If your program uses the Coro::Debug::log facility:

          Coro::Debug::log 0, "important message";
          Coro::Debug::log 9, "unimportant message";

       Then you can even receive log messages in any debugging session:

          > loglevel 5
          2007-09-26Z02:22:46 (9) unimportant message

       Other commands are available in the shell, use the "help" command for a list.

FUNCTIONS

       None of the functions are being exported.

       log $level, $msg
           Log a debug message of the given severity level (0 is highest, higher is less
           important) to all interested parties.

       stderr_loglevel $level
           Set the loglevel for logging to stderr (defaults to the value of the environment
           variable PERL_CORO_STDERR_LOGLEVEL, or -1 if missing).

       session_loglevel $level
           Set the default loglevel for new coro debug sessions (defaults to the value of the
           environment variable PERL_CORO_DEFAULT_LOGLEVEL, or -1 if missing).

       trace $coro, $loglevel
           Enables tracing the given coroutine at the given loglevel. If loglevel is omitted, use
           5. If coro is omitted, trace the current coroutine. Tracing incurs a very high runtime
           overhead.

           It is not uncommon to enable tracing on oneself by simply calling
           "Coro::Debug::trace".

           A message will be logged at the given loglevel if it is not possible to enable
           tracing.

       untrace $coro
           Disables tracing on the given coroutine.

       command $string
           Execute a debugger command, sending any output to STDOUT. Used by "session", below.

       session $fh
           Run an interactive debugger session on the given filehandle. Each line entered is
           simply passed to "command" (with a few exceptions).

       $server = new_unix_server Coro::Debug $path
           Creates a new unix domain socket that listens for connection requests and runs
           "session" on any connection. Normal unix permission checks and umask applies, so you
           can protect your socket by puttint it into a protected directory.

           The "socat" utility is an excellent way to connect to this socket:

              socat readline /path/to/socket

           Socat also offers history support:

              socat readline:history=/tmp/hist.corodebug /path/to/socket

           The server accepts connections until it is destroyed, so you must keep the return
           value around as long as you want the server to stay available.

       $server = new_tcp_server Coro::Debug $port
           Similar to "new_unix_server", but binds on a TCP port. Note that this is usually
           results in a gaping security hole.

           Currently, only a TCPv4 socket is created, in the future, a TCPv6 socket might also be
           created.

AUTHOR/SUPPORT/CONTACT

          Marc A. Lehmann <schmorp@schmorp.de>
          http://software.schmorp.de/pkg/Coro.html