'Snapshot Debugger CLI tool.'
Project description
Snapshot Debugger
The Snapshot Debugger lets you inspect the state of a running cloud application, at any code location, without stopping or slowing it down. It’s not your traditional process debugger but rather an always on, whole app debugger taking snapshots from any instance of the app.
You can use the Snapshot Debugger with any deployment of your application, including test, development, and production. The debugger typically adds less than 10ms to the request latency only when the application state is captured. In most cases, this isn’t noticeable by users.
Project Status: Archived
This project has been archived and is no longer supported. There will be no further bug fixes or security patches. The repository can be forked by users if they want to maintain it going forward.
This OSS solution provides an alternative to Cloud Debugger. Cloud Debugger was deprecated on May 16, 2022 and the service was shut down on May 31, 2023
Limitations
- Python 2.7 is not supported
CLI Command Reference
See COMMAND_REFERENCE.md.
Installing the Snapshot Debugger CLI
Install the debugger CLI in your local environment, or in your Cloud Shell $HOME directory. See Using Cloud Shell for information on using Cloud Shell.
python3 -m pip install snapshot-dbg-cli
Note: When using the Snapshot Debugger in Cloud Shell you will be asked to Authorize using your account credentials.
Running the Snapshot Debugger CLI
There are two options to run the CLI once the pip install has been completed.
Option 1: Use the installed script
As part of the pip install process, a script, snapshot-dbg-cli
will be
installed which can be used to run the CLI.
Example running the list_debuggees
command:
snapshot-dbg-cli list_debuggees
NOTE: To run the script this way from any directory, you must ensure the script's install directory is in your PATH. Pip should emit a warning if the install location is not in the PATH, and also provide the install location in this case, so that you can add it to your PATH.
Option 2: Run the package directly
Example running the list_debuggees
command:
python3 -m snapshot_dbg_cli list_debuggees
Before you begin
Ensure you have the proper permissions
To complete the setup you’ll need to have the following permissions in your
Google Cloud project. If you are an Owner
or Editor
of the Google Cloud
project, then you have these permissions.
- firebase.projects.create
- firebase.projects.update,
- firebasedatabase.instances.create
- firebasedatabase.instances.get
- resourcemanager.projects.get
- serviceusage.services.enable
- serviceusage.services.get
For more information on permissions and roles in Google projects, read Understanding roles
Using Snapshot Debugger in Cloud Shell
Snapshot Debugger requires Python 3.6 or above and the gcloud
CLI. If you are
working in Cloud Shell, you already have Python and gcloud
installed.
In addition, the environment should already configured correctly by default. You can verify this by running the following commands:
gcloud config get-value project
gcloud config get-value account
NOTE: When running the cli, you may encounter a popup warning you that
gcloud is requesting your credentials to make a GCP API call
. You'll need to clickAUTHORIZE
to proceed.
Using Snapshot Debugger outside of Cloud Shell
Ensure you have Python 3.6 or above installed
The Snapshot Debugger CLI requires Python 3.6 or newer.
Install Google Cloud gcloud
CLI
The Snapshot Debugger CLI depends on the gcloud
CLI. To install the gcloud
CLI, follow these instructions. If
you already have the gcloud
CLI installed, run gcloud components update
to
update all of your installed components to the latest version.
Set up the environment
- Run
gcloud auth login
, be sure to use the account that has permissions on the Google Cloud project you are working on. - Run
gcloud config set project PROJECT_ID
. Where PROJECT_ID is the project you want to use. The Snapshot Debugger CLI always acts on the currentgcloud
configured project.
Enable Firebase for your Google Cloud Project
The Snapshot Debugger CLI and agents use a Firebase Realtime Database (RTDB) to communicate.
If you already use Firebase in your project, skip to the Set up the Firebase RTDB section.
-
Add Firebase to your project:
https://console.firebase.google.com/?dlAction=MigrateCloudProject&cloudProjectNumber=PROJECT_ID
Where PROJECT_ID is your project ID
-
Select your Project ID and click Continue. If you have billing enabled in your project, the pay-as-you-go Blaze plan is selected, otherwise the free Spark plan is selected. If you have billing enabled and want to use the free Spark plan, set up a new project without billing enabled.
Note: The Snapshot Debugger uses the Firebase RTDB service. Most users' usage will be low enough to remain under the free usage limits.
-
If you are using the pay-as-you-go Blaze plan, click Confirm plan. You are not prompted to confirm if you are on the free Spark plan.
-
Read the information under A Few things to remember when adding Firebase to a Google Cloud project then click Continue.
-
Toggle the enable analytics option to enable or disable Google Analytics for Firebase. Google Analytics isn't required for Debugger use.
-
Click Continue.
-
Click Get Started.
-
Click on your project.
Set up the Firebase RTDB
The instructions are slightly different depending on whether you are on the Spark or Blaze billing plan. Follow the steps in the following section for the plan you have.
You can check what billing plan is in effect for your project on the Firebase Usage & Billing page:
https://console.firebase.google.com/project/PROJECT_ID/usage/details
Where PROJECT_ID is your project ID
Blaze plan RTDB setup
This will instruct the debugger CLI to create and use a database with the name
PROJECT_ID-cdbg
- Run
snapshot-dbg-cli init
. - The output resembles the following:
Project 'test-proj' is successfully configured with the Firebase Realtime
Database for use by Snapshot Debugger.
The full database information is below. If you have specified a custom database
ID the url below is the one you'll need to specify when using the other cli
commands.
name: projects/23498723497/locations/us-central1/instances/test-proj-cdbg
project: projects/23498723497
database url: https://test-proj-cdbg.firebaseio.com
type: USER_DATABASE
state: ACTIVE
Note: The information printed by the init
command can be accessed from within
your Firebase project. It’s safe to run the snapshot-dbg-cli init
command
multiple times to view this information.
Spark plan RTDB setup
This will instruct the CLI to create and use a database with the name
PROJECT_ID-default-rtdb
. It will only be created if it does not currently
exist.
- Run
snapshot-dbg-cli init --use-default-rtdb
- The output resembles the following:
Project 'test-proj' is successfully configured with the Firebase Realtime
Database for use by Snapshot Debugger.
The full database information is below. If you have specified a custom database
ID the url below is the one you'll need to specify when using the other cli
commands.
name: projects/23498723497/locations/us-central1/instances/default
project: projects/23498723497
database url: https://test-proj-default-rtdb.firebaseio.com
type: USER_DATABASE
state: ACTIVE
Note: The information printed by the init
command can be accessed from within
your Firebase project. It’s safe to run the snapshot-dbg-cli init --use-default-rtdb
command multiple times to view this information.
Setting up Firebase RTDB in other regions
By default, snapshot-dbg-cli init
will create a Firebase Realtime Database in
us-central1
. It is possible to create and use a database in any region
supported by Firebase Realtime Database. See
supported RTDB locations.
Setting up your database in a non-default region comes with some trade-offs:
- As a positive, you get to control where your snapshot data will be stored. This may be important for compliance reasons.
- As a negative, the vsCode extension and agents will be unable to automatically find the database. The database URL will need to be provided explicitly via configuration, see the following for details:
You can set up your database in a non-default location as follows:
snapshot-dbg-cli init --location={YOUR_LOCATION}
For example, you may want to set up your database in Belgium, and so would run
snapshot-dbg-cli init --location=europe-west1
Make note of the database URL provided in the command output; you will need to provide this to your debug agent(s) and the vsCode plugin.
Set up Snapshot Debugger in your Google Cloud project
Working Samples
Working examples of using the Snapshot Debugger with Java, Python and Node.js applications across different Google Cloud environments can be found in:
Agent Documentation
See the following for agent specific documentation:
Example workflow
You create a breakpoint (snapshot or logpoint) on debuggees. Debuggees represent instances of the running application. In general all instances of the same version of the application will have the same debuggee ID, and breakpoints set on a debuggee will be installed on all running instances of it.
List Debuggees
Run the following command
snapshot-dbg-cli list_debuggees --include-inactive
The output resembles the following:
Name ID Description Last Active Status
------------- ---------- ---------------------------------------- -------------------- --------
test-app - v2 d-8dd7f149 node index.js module:test-app version:v2 2022-12-16T21:45:07Z ACTIVE
test-app - v1 d-24abc4f1 node index.js module:test-app version:v1 2022-10-16T21:45:07Z INACTIVE
Set Snapshots
Snapshots capture local variables and the call stack at a specific line location in your app's source code. You can specify certain conditions and locations to return a snapshot of your app's data, and view it in detail to debug your app.
Set snapshots with the following command:
snapshot-dbg-cli set_snapshot index.js:21 --debuggee-id d-8dd7f149
Where:
index.js:21
is thefile:line
for the snapshotd-8dd7f149
is the debuggee ID
Snapshot conditions (optional)
A snapshot condition is a simple expression in the app's language that must evaluate to true for the snapshot to be taken. Snapshot conditions are evaluated each time the line is executed, by any instance, until the condition evaluates to true or the snapshot times out.
Use of snapshot conditions is optional.
The condition is a full boolean expression that can include logical operators.
Conditions are specified using the --condition
flag of the set_snapshots
command.
Example:
snapshot-dbg-cli set_snapshot index.js:26 --debuggee-id d-8dd7f149 --condition="ultimateAnswer <= 42 && foo==bar"
You can use the following language features to express conditions:
Java
Most Java expressions are supported, including:
- Local variables:
a == 8
. - Numerical and boolean operations:
x + y < 20
. - Instance and static fields:
this.counter == 20
,this.myObj.isShutdown
,myStatic
, orcom.mycompany.MyClass.staticMember
. - String comparisons with the equality operator:
myString == "abc"
. - Function calls. Only read-only functions can be used. For example,
StringBuilder.indexOf()
is supported, butStringBuilder.append()
is not. - Type casting, with fully qualified types:
((com.myprod.ClassImpl) myInterface).internalField
The following language features are not supported:
- Unboxing of numeric types, such as
Integer
; usemyInteger.value
instead.
Python
Most Python expressions are supported, including:
- Reading local and global variables.
- Reading from arrays, lists, slices, dictionaries and objects.
- Calling simple methods.
The following language features are not supported:
- Calling functions that allocate new objects or use complex constructs.
- Creating new objects inside the expression.
Node.js
Most Javascript expressions are supported, with the following caveat:
Expressions that may have static side effects are disallowed. The debug agent ensures all conditions and watchpoints you add are read-only and have no side effects, however, it doesn’t catch expressions that have dynamic side-effects.
For example, o.f
looks like a property access, but dynamically, it may end up
calling a getter function. The debugger presently doesn't detect such
dynamic-side effects.
Snapshot expressions (optional)
Snapshot Debugger's Expressions feature allows you to evaluate complex expressions or traverse object hierarchies when a snapshot is taken. Expressions support the same language features as snapshot conditions, described above.
Use of expressions is optional.
Typical uses for expressions are:
- To view static or global variables that are not part of the local variable set.
- To easily view deeply nested member variables.
- To avoid repetitive mathematical calculations. For example, calculating a
duration in seconds with
(endTimeMillis - startTimeMillis) / 1000.0
.
Expressions are specified using the --expression flag of the set_snapshots command.
Example:
snapshot-dbg-cli set_snapshot index.js:26 --debuggee-id d-8dd7f149 --expression="histogram.length"
List snapshots
List snapshots with the following command:
snapshot-dbg-cli list_snapshots --debuggee-id d-8dd7f149 --include-inactive
Where:
d-8dd7f149
is the debuggee ID
The output resembles the following:
Status Location Condition CompletedTime ID
--------- ----------- ----------- -------------------- ------------
ACTIVE index.js:21 b-1648008775
ACTIVE index.js:21 b-1648044994
ACTIVE index.js:21 b-1648045010
COMPLETED index.js:21 2022-03-23T02:52:23Z b-1648003845
Get snapshot
Get a snapshot with the following command:
snapshot-dbg-cli get_snapshot b-1649947203 --debuggee-id d-8dd7f149
Where:
b-1649947203
is the snapshot IDd-8dd7f149
is the debuggee ID
The output resembles the following:
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
| Summary
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Location: index.js:30
Condition: No condition set.
Expressions: No expressions set.
Status: Complete
Create Time: 2022-05-13T14:14:01Z
Final Time: 2022-05-13T14:14:02Z
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
| Evaluated Expressions
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
There were no expressions specified.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
| Local Variables For Stack Frame Index 0:
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
[
{
"req (IncomingMessage) ": {
"_readableState (ReadableState) ": {
"objectMode": "false",
"highWaterMark": "16384",
"buffer (BufferList) ": {
"head": null,
"tail": null,
"length": "0"
},
[... snip]
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
| CallStack:
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Function Location
-------------------- -----------
(anonymous function) index.js:30
Set Logpoints
Adds a debug logpoint to a debug target (debuggee). Logpoints inject logging into running services without changing your code or restarting your application. Every time any instance executes code at the logpoint location, Snapshot Debugger logs a message. Output is sent to the standard log for the programming language of the target (java.logging for Java, logging for Python, etc.)
Logpoints remain active for 24 hours after creation, or until they are deleted or the service is redeployed. If you place a logpoint on a line that receives lots of traffic, Debugger throttles the logpoint to reduce its impact on your application.
Set logpoints with the following command:
snapshot-dbg-cli set_logpoint index.js:21 "a={a} b={b}" --debuggee-id d-8dd7f149
Where:
index.js:21
is thefile:line
for the logpointa={a} b={b}
is the logpoint message formatd-8dd7f149
is the debuggee ID
Note: A common issue that users have run into is that logging at INFO level is often suppressed by the default logger and so logpoints will appear to be broken. See the
--log-level
option for setting a higher priority log level.
Logpoint message format
The format string is the message which will be logged every time the logpoint location is executed. If the string contains curly braces ('{' and '}'), any text within the curly braces will be interpreted as a run-time expression in the debug target's language, which will be evaluated when the logpoint is hit. Some valid examples are {a}, {myObj.myFunc()} or {a + b}. The value of the expression will then replace the {} expression in the resulting log output. For example, if you specify the format string "a={a}, (b+1)={b+1}", and the logpoint is hit when local variable a is 1 and b is 3, the resulting log output would be "a=1, (b+1)=3".
For more detailed information on valid expressions see Snapshot expressions as the rules are the same for logpoint expressions.
Logpoint conditions (optional)
A logpoint condition is a simple expression in the application language that must evaluate to true for the logpoint to be logged. Logpoint conditions are evaluated each time the line is executed, by any instance, until the logpoint expires or is deleted.
Use of logpoint conditions is optional.
For more detailed information on valid conditions see Snapshot conditions as the rules are the same for logpoint conditions.
List logpoints
List logpoints with the following command:
snapshot-dbg-cli list_logpoints --debuggee-id d-8dd7f149 --include-inactive
Where:
d-8dd7f149
is the debuggee ID
The output resembles the following:
User Email Location Condition Log Level Log Message Format ID Status
------------ -------------- --------- --------- ------------------- ------------ -------------------------------------------
foo1@bar.com Main.java:23 INFO a={a} b={b} b-1660681047 EXPIRED
foo2@bar.com Main.java:25 a == 3 WARNING Line hit b-1660932877 EXPIRED
foo2@bar.com Main.java:9999 INFO Log msg b-1661203071 SOURCE_LOCATION: No code found at line 9999
Get logpoint
Get a logpoint with the following command:
snapshot-dbg-cli get_logpoint b-1660681047 --debuggee-id d-8dd7f149
Where:
b-1660681047
is the logpoint IDd-8dd7f149
is the debuggee ID
The output resembles the following:
Logpoint ID: b-1660681047
Log Message Format: a == 3
Location: Main.java:23
Condition: No condition set
Status: EXPIRED
Create Time: 2022-08-19T18:14:38Z
Final Time: 2022-08-20T18:14:39Z
User Email: foo1@bar.com
Cleaning up
The following commands can be used to delete debuggees and breakpoints (snapshots and logpoints).
Delete Debuggees
Run the following command
snapshot-dbg-cli delete_debuggees
The output resembles the following:
This command will delete the following debuggees:
Name ID Last Active Status
------------------------- ---------- -------------------- ------
default - 20221125t224954 d-39f7082e 2022-12-05T03:13:42Z STALE
default - 20221125t154414 d-dba89292 2022-12-04T03:02:48Z STALE
Do you want to continue (Y/n)?
Deleted 2 debuggees.
When deleting a debuggee, all breakpoints that belong to it are also deleted.
Delete snapshots
Delete snapshots with the following command:
snapshot-dbg-cli delete_snapshots --debuggee-id d-8dd7f149 --include-inactive
Where:
d-8dd7f149
is the debuggee ID
The output resembles the following:
This command will delete the following snapshots:
Status Location Condition ID
--------- ----------- ----------- ------------
ACTIVE index.js:28 b-1649959801
ACTIVE index.js:27 b-1649959807
COMPLETED index.js:19 b-1649702213
COMPLETED index.js:22 b-1649702753
Do you want to continue (Y/n)? Y
Deleted 4 snapshots.
Delete logpoints
Delete logpoints with the following command:
snapshot-dbg-cli delete_snapshots --debuggee-id d-8dd7f149 --include-inactive
Where:
d-8dd7f149
is the debuggee ID
The output resembles the following:
This command will delete the following logpoints:
Location Condition Log Level Log Message Format ID
--------------- --------- --------- ------------------ ------------
Main.java:25 a == 3 WARNING Line hit b-1660927187
Main.java:9999 INFO Log msg b-1660927272
Do you want to continue (Y/n)?
Deleted 4 snapshots.
VSCode Extension
There is a VSCode extension for the Snapshot Debugger. You can use this extension to set logpoints, set breakpoints and view snapshots in the comfort of your IDE. See the extension's README for more details.
You can install the extension by downloading it from the
most recent release, and then running
code --install-extension snapshotdbg-*.vsix
.
Note that you will still need to use the Snapshot Debugger CLI to set up your environment and to purge old data. Gcloud needs to be installed for credential management.
Troubleshooting
See Snapshot Debugger Troubleshooting
Firebase DB Schema
Project details
Release history Release notifications | RSS feed
Download files
Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.
Source Distribution
Built Distribution
File details
Details for the file snapshot-dbg-cli-0.3.8.tar.gz
.
File metadata
- Download URL: snapshot-dbg-cli-0.3.8.tar.gz
- Upload date:
- Size: 64.3 kB
- Tags: Source
- Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
- Uploaded via: twine/4.0.2 CPython/3.11.5
File hashes
Algorithm | Hash digest | |
---|---|---|
SHA256 | badaa5b8e3837165b123e9b3801890ab09aa76aee00796471fb6f10c41c37446 |
|
MD5 | 488f8802a2b70608ef31aa891a700c9c |
|
BLAKE2b-256 | d953febdfd6f5ddefede39788d114b04d26f492b3b6dbccffe5c3f83544b656b |
File details
Details for the file snapshot_dbg_cli-0.3.8-py3-none-any.whl
.
File metadata
- Download URL: snapshot_dbg_cli-0.3.8-py3-none-any.whl
- Upload date:
- Size: 86.1 kB
- Tags: Python 3
- Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
- Uploaded via: twine/4.0.2 CPython/3.11.5
File hashes
Algorithm | Hash digest | |
---|---|---|
SHA256 | c7bde0d11a6c9dd00c9c92ce4dea076fd234c66dd9bb402cafcb48f44e044be0 |
|
MD5 | 7d00f036088eab42e4419572fb180ea7 |
|
BLAKE2b-256 | ff3c41fdb1ba8d02353769b1a4d891c77b41600eda95f6220fc3647a9a134ec7 |