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NAME

       int - Interpreter Interface.

DESCRIPTION

       The  Erlang  interpreter  provides  mechanisms  for  breakpoints  and  stepwise  execution of code. It is
       primarily intended to be used by Debugger, see the User's Guide and debugger(3erl).

       The following can be done from the shell:

         * Specify the modules to be interpreted.

         * Specify breakpoints.

         * Monitor the current status of all processes executing code in interpreted modules, also processes  at
           other Erlang nodes.

       By  attaching  to  a  process executing interpreted code, it is possible to examine variable bindings and
       order stepwise execution. This is done by sending and receiving information to/from the process through a
       third  process,  called  the  meta  process. You can implement your own attached process. See int.erl for
       available functions and dbg_wx_trace.erl for possible messages.

       The interpreter depends on the Kernel, STDLIB, and GS applications. This means that modules belonging  to
       any  of  these applications are not allowed to be interpreted, as it could lead to a deadlock or emulator
       crash. This also applies to modules belonging to the Debugger application.

BREAKPOINTS

       Breakpoints are specified on a line basis. When a process executing code in an interpreted module reaches
       a  breakpoint,  it stops. This means that a breakpoint must be set at an executable line, that is, a code
       line containing an executable expression.

       A breakpoint has the following:

         * A status, which is active or inactive. An inactive breakpoint is ignored.

         * A trigger action. When a breakpoint is reached, the trigger action specifies if the breakpoint is  to
           continue as active (enable), or to become inactive (disable), or to be removed (delete).

         * Optionally  an  associated  condition.  A  condition is a tuple {Module,Name}. When the breakpoint is
           reached, Module:Name(Bindings) is called. If it evaluates to true, execution stops. If  it  evaluates
           to false, the breakpoint is ignored. Bindings contains the current variable bindings. To retrieve the
           value for a specified variable, use get_binding.

       By default, a breakpoint is active, has trigger action enable,  and  has  no  associated  condition.  For
       details about breakpoints, see the User's Guide.

EXPORTS

       i(AbsModule) -> {module,Module} | error
       i(AbsModules) -> ok
       ni(AbsModule) -> {module,Module} | error
       ni(AbsModules) -> ok

              Types:

                 AbsModules = [AbsModule]
                 AbsModule = Module | File | [Module | File]
                  Module = atom()
                  File = string()

              Interprets  the  specified  module(s).  i/1  interprets  the module only at the current node. ni/1
              interprets the module at all known nodes.

              A module can be specified by its module name (atom) or filename.

              If specified by its module name, the object code Module.beam is searched for in the current  path.
              The source code Module.erl is searched for first in the same directory as the object code, then in
              an src directory next to it.

              If specified by its filename, the filename can include a  path  and  the  .erl  extension  can  be
              omitted.  The  object  code  Module.beam is searched for first in the same directory as the source
              code, then in an ebin directory next to it, and then in the current path.

          Note:
              The interpreter requires both the source code and the object code. The object  code  must  include
              debug information, that is, only modules compiled with option debug_info set can be interpreted.

              The functions returns {module,Module} if the module was interpreted, otherwise error is returned.

              The  argument  can  also  be  a  list of modules or filenames, in which case the function tries to
              interpret each module as specified earlier. The function then always returns ok, but  prints  some
              information to stdout if a module cannot be interpreted.

       n(AbsModule) -> ok
       nn(AbsModule) -> ok

              Types:

                 AbsModule = Module | File | [Module | File]
                  Module = atom()
                  File = string()

              Stops  interpreting  the  specified  module. n/1 stops interpreting the module only at the current
              node. nn/1 stops interpreting the module at all known nodes.

              As for i/1 and ni/1, a module can be specified by its module name or filename.

       interpreted() -> [Module]

              Types:

                 Module = atom()

              Returns a list with all interpreted modules.

       file(Module) -> File | {error,not_loaded}

              Types:

                 Module = atom()
                 File = string()

              Returns the source code filename File for an interpreted module Module.

       interpretable(AbsModule) -> true | {error,Reason}

              Types:

                 AbsModule = Module | File
                  Module = atom()
                  File = string()
                 Reason = no_src | no_beam | no_debug_info | badarg | {app,App}
                  App = atom()

              Checks if a module can be interpreted. The module can be specified by its module  name  Module  or
              its  source  filename  File. If specified by a module name, the module is searched for in the code
              path.

              The function returns true if all of the following apply:

                * Both source code and object code for the module is found.

                * The module has been compiled with option debug_info set.

                * The module does not belong to any of the applications Kernel, STDLIB, GS, or Debugger.

              The function returns {error,Reason} if the module cannot  be  interpreted.  Reason  can  have  the
              following values:

                no_src:
                  No source code is found. It is assumed that the source code and object code are located either
                  in the same directory, or in src and ebin directories next to each other.

                no_beam:
                  No object code is found. It is assumed that the source code and object code are located either
                  in the same directory, or in src and ebin directories next to each other.

                no_debug_info:
                  The module has not been compiled with option debug_info set.

                badarg:
                  AbsModule  is  not  found. This could be because the specified file does not exist, or because
                  code:which/1 does not return a BEAM filename, which is the  case  not  only  for  non-existing
                  modules but also for modules that are preloaded or cover-compiled.

                {app,App}:
                  App is kernel, stdlib, gs, or debugger if AbsModule belongs to one of these applications.

              Notice  that  the  function  can return true for a module that in fact is not interpretable in the
              case where the module is marked as sticky or resides in a directory marked as sticky.  The  reason
              is that this is not discovered until the interpreter tries to load the module.

       auto_attach() -> false | {Flags,Function}
       auto_attach(false)
       auto_attach(Flags, Function)

              Types:

                 Flags = [init | break | exit]
                 Function = {Module,Name,Args}
                  Module = Name = atom()
                  Args = [term()]

              Gets  and  sets  when  and  how to attach automatically to a process executing code in interpreted
              modules. false means never attach automatically, this is the default. Otherwise  automatic  attach
              is defined by a list of flags and a function. The following flags can be specified:

                * init - Attach when a process for the first time calls an interpreted function.

                * break - Attach whenever a process reaches a breakpoint.

                * exit - Attach when a process terminates.

              When the specified event occurs, the function Function is called as:

              spawn(Module, Name, [Pid | Args])

              Pid is the pid of the process executing interpreted code.

       stack_trace() -> Flag
       stack_trace(Flag)

              Types:

                 Flag = all | no_tail | false

              Gets  and  sets  how  to  save  call  frames in the stack. Saving call frames makes it possible to
              inspect the call chain of a process, and is also used to emulate the stack trace if an  error  (an
              exception of class error) occurs. The following flags can be specified:

                all:
                  Save information about all current calls, that is, function calls that have not yet returned a
                  value.

                no_tail:
                  Save information about current calls, but discard previous information when a  tail  recursive
                  call  is made. This option consumes less memory and can be necessary to use for processes with
                  long lifetimes and many tail recursive calls. This is the default.

                false:
                  Save no information about current calls.

       break(Module, Line) -> ok | {error,break_exists}

              Types:

                 Module = atom()
                 Line = int()

              Creates a breakpoint at Line in Module.

       delete_break(Module, Line) -> ok

              Types:

                 Module = atom()
                 Line = int()

              Deletes the breakpoint at Line in Module.

       break_in(Module, Name, Arity) -> ok | {error,function_not_found}

              Types:

                 Module = Name = atom()
                 Arity = int()

              Creates a breakpoint at the first line of every clause of function Module:Name/Arity.

       del_break_in(Module, Name, Arity) -> ok | {error,function_not_found}

              Types:

                 Module = Name = atom()
                 Arity = int()

              Deletes the breakpoints at the first line of every clause of function Module:Name/Arity.

       no_break() -> ok
       no_break(Module) -> ok

              Deletes all breakpoints, or all breakpoints in Module.

       disable_break(Module, Line) -> ok

              Types:

                 Module = atom()
                 Line = int()

              Makes the breakpoint at Line in Module inactive.

       enable_break(Module, Line) -> ok

              Types:

                 Module = atom()
                 Line = int()

              Makes the breakpoint at Line in Module active.

       action_at_break(Module, Line, Action) -> ok

              Types:

                 Module = atom()
                 Line = int()
                 Action = enable | disable | delete

              Sets the trigger action of the breakpoint at Line in Module to Action.

       test_at_break(Module, Line, Function) -> ok

              Types:

                 Module = atom()
                 Line = int()
                 Function = {Module,Name}
                  Name = atom()

              Sets the conditional test of the breakpoint at Line in  Module  to  Function.  The  function  must
              fulfill the requirements specified in section Breakpoints.

       get_binding(Var, Bindings) -> {value,Value} | unbound

              Types:

                 Var = atom()
                 Bindings = term()
                 Value = term()

              Retrieves  the binding of Var. This function is intended to be used by the conditional function of
              a breakpoint.

       all_breaks() -> [Break]
       all_breaks(Module) -> [Break]

              Types:

                 Break = {Point,Options}
                  Point = {Module,Line}
                  Module = atom()
                  Line = int()
                  Options = [Status,Trigger,null,Cond|]
                  Status = active | inactive
                  Trigger = enable | disable | delete
                  Cond = null | Function
                  Function = {Module,Name}
                  Name = atom()

              Gets all breakpoints, or all breakpoints in Module.

       snapshot() -> [Snapshot]

              Types:

                 Snapshot = {Pid, Function, Status, Info}
                  Pid = pid()
                  Function = {Module,Name,Args}
                  Module = Name = atom()
                  Args = [term()]
                  Status = idle | running | waiting | break | exit | no_conn
                  Info = {} | {Module,Line} | ExitReason
                  Line = int()
                  ExitReason = term()

              Gets information about all processes executing interpreted code.

                * Pid - Process identifier.

                * Function - First interpreted function called by the process.

                * Status - Current status of the process.

                * Info - More information.

              Status is one of the following:

                * idle - The process is no longer executing interpreted code. Info={}.

                * running - The process is running. Info={}.

                * waiting - The process is waiting at a receive. Info={}.

                * break - Process execution is stopped, normally at a breakpoint. Info={Module,Line}.

                * exit - The process is terminated. Info=ExitReason.

                * no_conn - The connection is down to the node where the process is running. Info={}.

       clear() -> ok

              Clears information about processes executing interpreted code by removing  all  information  about
              terminated processes.

       continue(Pid) -> ok | {error,not_interpreted}
       continue(X,Y,Z) -> ok | {error,not_interpreted}

              Types:

                 Pid = pid()
                 X = Y = Z = int()

              Resumes process execution for Pid or c:pid(X,Y,Z).