1 <div id="pageData-name" class="pageData">Tutorial: Debugging</div> 2 <div id="pageData-showTOC" class="pageData">true</div> 3 4 <p> 5 This tutorial introduces you to using 6 Google Chrome's built-in Developer Tools 7 to interactively debug an extension. 8 </p> 9 10 11 <h2 id="extension-info"> View extension information </h2> 12 13 <p> 14 To follow this tutorial, you need 15 the Hello World extension that was featured in 16 <a href="getstarted.html">Getting Started</a>. 17 In this section, 18 you'll load the extension 19 and take a look at its information 20 in the Extensions page. 21 </p> 22 23 <ol> 24 <li> 25 <p> 26 Load the Hello World extension if it isn't already running. 27 If the extension is running, 28 you'll see the Hello World icon 29 <img src="examples/tutorials/getstarted/icon.png" 30 width="19" height="19" alt="" 31 style="margin:0" /> 32 to the right of 33 your browser's address bar. 34 </p> 35 36 <p> 37 If the Hello World extension isn't already running, 38 find the extension files and load them. 39 If you don't have a handy copy of the files, 40 extract them from this 41 <a href="examples/tutorials/getstarted.zip">ZIP file</a>. 42 See Getting Started if you need 43 <a href="getstarted.html#load-ext">instructions 44 for loading the extension</a>. 45 </p> 46 </li> 47 48 <li> 49 Go to the Extensions page 50 (<b>chrome://extensions</b>), 51 and make sure the page is in Developer mode. 52 </li> 53 54 <li> 55 Look at the Hello World extension's information on that page. 56 You can see details such as the extension's 57 name, description, and ID. 58 </li> 59 </ol> 60 61 <h2 id="inspect-popup"> Inspect the popup </h2> 62 63 <p> 64 As long as your browser is in Developer mode, it's easy to inspect popups. 65 </p> 66 67 <ol> 68 <li> 69 Go to the Extensions page (<b>chrome://extensions</b>), and make sure Developer 70 mode is still enabled. The Extensions page doesn't need to be open 71 for the following to work. The browser remembers the setting, 72 even when the page isn't shown. 73 </li> 74 <li> 75 Right-click the Hello World icon 76 <img src="examples/tutorials/getstarted/icon.png" 77 width="19" height="19" alt="" 78 style="margin:0" /> 79 and choose the <b>Inspect popup</b> menu item. The popup appears, 80 and a Developer Tools window like the following should display the code 81 for <b>popup.html</b>. 82 83 <p> 84 <img src="images/devtools-1.gif" alt="" 85 width="500" height="294" /> 86 </p> 87 The popup remains open as long as the Developer Tools window does. 88 </li> 89 <li> 90 If the <strong>Scripts</strong> button isn't already selected, 91 click it. 92 <!-- [PENDING: can we omit this step?] --> 93 </li> 94 <li> 95 Click the console button 96 <img src="images/console-button.gif" 97 style="margin:0; padding:0" align="absmiddle" 98 width="26" height="22" alt="" />(second 99 from left, 100 at the bottom of the Developer Tools window) 101 so that you can see both the code and the console. 102 </li> 103 </ol> 104 105 <h2 id="debug"> Use the debugger </h2> 106 107 <p> 108 In this section, 109 you'll follow the execution of the popup page 110 as it adds images to itself. 111 </p> 112 113 <ol> 114 <li> 115 Set a breakpoint inside the image-adding loop 116 by searching for the string <b>img.src</b> 117 and clicking the number of the line where it occurs 118 (for example, <strong>37</strong>): 119 <p> 120 <img src="images/devtools-2.gif" alt="" 121 width="500" height="294" /> 122 </p> 123 </li> 124 125 <li> 126 Make sure you can see the <b>popup.html</b> tab. 127 It should show 20 "hello world" images. 128 </li> 129 130 <li> 131 At the console prompt, reload the popup page 132 by entering <b>location.reload(true)</b>: 133 134 <pre> 135 > <b>location.reload(true)</b> 136 </pre> 137 138 <p> 139 The popup page goes blank as it begins to reload, 140 and its execution stops at line 37. 141 </p> 142 </li> 143 144 <li> 145 In the upper right part of the tools window, 146 you should see the local scope variables. 147 This section shows the current values of all variables in the current scope. 148 For example, in the following screenshot 149 the value of <code>i</code> is 0, and 150 <code>photos</code> is a node list 151 that contains at least a few elements. 152 (In fact, it contains 20 elements at indexes 0 through 19, 153 each one representing a photo.) 154 155 <p> 156 <img src="images/devtools-localvars.gif" alt="" 157 width="225" height="215" /> 158 </p> 159 </li> 160 161 <li> 162 Click the play/pause button 163 <img src="images/play-button.gif" 164 style="margin:0; padding:0" align="absmiddle" 165 width="22" height="20" alt="" />(near 166 the top right of the Developer Tools window) 167 to go through the image-processing loop a single time. 168 Each time you click that button, 169 the value of <code>i</code> increments and 170 another icon appears in the popup page. 171 For example, when <code>i</code> is 10, 172 the popup page looks something like this: 173 </li> 174 175 <p> 176 <img src="images/devtools-3.gif" 177 width="500" height="245" 178 alt="the popup page with 10 images" /> 179 </p> 180 181 <li> 182 Use the buttons next to the play/pause button 183 to step over, into, and out of function calls. 184 To let the page finish loading, 185 click line <b>37</b> to disable the breakpoint, 186 and then press play/pause 187 <img src="images/play-button.gif" 188 style="margin:0; padding:0" align="absmiddle" 189 width="22" height="20" alt="" />to 190 continue execution. 191 </li> 192 193 </ol> 194 195 196 <h2 id="summary">Summary</h2> 197 198 <p> 199 This tutorial demonstrated some techniques you can use 200 to debug your extensions: 201 </p> 202 203 <ul> 204 <li> 205 Find your extension's ID and links to its pages in 206 the <b>Extensions</b> page 207 (<b>chrome://extensions</b>). 208 </li> 209 <li> 210 View hard-to-reach pages 211 (and any other file in your extension) using 212 <b>chrome-extension://</b><em>extensionId</em><b>/</b><em>filename</em>. 213 </li> 214 <li> 215 Use Developer Tools to inspect 216 and step through a page's JavaScript code. 217 </li> 218 <li> 219 Reload the currently inspected page from the console 220 using <b>location.reload(true)</b>. 221 </li> 222 </ul> 223 224 225 <h2 id="next">Now what?</h2> 226 227 <p> 228 Now that you've been introduced to debugging, 229 here are suggestions for what to do next: 230 </p> 231 232 <ul> 233 <li> 234 Watch the extensions video 235 <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IP0nMv_NI1s&feature=PlayList&p=CA101D6A85FE9D4B&index=5">Developing and Debugging</a>. 236 </li> 237 <li> 238 Try installing and inspecting other extensions, 239 such as the 240 <a href="samples.html">samples</a>. 241 </li> 242 <li> 243 Try using widely available debugging APIs such as 244 <code>console.log()</code> and <code>console.error()</code> 245 in your extension's JavaScript code. 246 Example: <code>console.log("Hello, world!")</code> 247 </li> 248 <li> 249 Follow the <a href="http://www.chromium.org/devtools/google-chrome-developer-tools-tutorial">Developer Tools tutorial</a>, 250 explore the 251 <a href="http://www.chromium.org/devtools">Developer Tools site</a>, 252 and watch some video tutorials. 253 </li> 254 </ul> 255 256 <!-- [PENDING: do something to help people debug content scripts, which show up in blue] --> 257 258 <p> 259 For more ideas, 260 see the <a href="getstarted.html#summary">Now what?</a> section 261 of Getting Started. 262 </p> 263