New in version 3.4.
See also
Please make sure to read PIO Unified Debugger guide first.
debug_tool
¶A name of debugging tool. This option is useful when board supports more than one debugging tool (adapter, probe) or you want to create Custom debugging configuration.
See available tools in Tools & Debug Probes.
Example
[env:debug]
platform = ...
board = ...
debug_tool = custom
debug_init_break
¶An initial breakpoint that makes your program stop whenever a certain point in
the program is reached. Default value is set to tbreak main
and means
creating a temporary breakpoint at int main(...)
function and
automatically delete it after the first time a program stops there.
Note
Please note that each debugging tool (adapter, probe) has limited number of hardware breakpoints.
If you need more Project Initial Breakpoints, please place them in debug_extra_cmds.
Examples
[env:debug]
platform = ...
board = ...
; Examples 1: disable initial breakpoint
debug_init_break =
; Examples 2: temporary stop at ``void loop()`` function
debug_init_break = tbreak loop
; Examples 3: stop in main.cpp at line 13
debug_init_break = break main.cpp:13
; Examples 4: temporary stop at ``void Reset_Handler(void)``
debug_init_break = tbreak Reset_Handler
debug_init_cmds
¶Initial commands that will be passed to back-end debugger.
PlatformIO dynamically configures back-end debugger depending on a debug environment. Highly recommended to DO NOT override this option.
For example, the custom initial commands for GDB:
[env:debug]
platform = ...
board = ...
debug_init_cmds =
target extended-remote $DEBUG_PORT
$INIT_BREAK
monitor reset halt
$LOAD_CMD
monitor init
monitor reset halt
debug_extra_cmds
¶Extra commands that will be passed to back-end debugger after initialization.
For example, add custom breakpoint and load .gdbinit
from a project directory
for GDB:
[env:debug]
platform = ...
board = ...
debug_extra_cmds =
break main.cpp:13
break foo.cpp:100
source .gdbinit
Note
Initial Project Breakpoints: Use break path/to/file:LINE_NUMBER
to
define initial breakpoints for debug environment. Multiple breakpoints are
allowed.
To save session breakpoints, please use save breakpoints [filename]
command in Debug Console. For example, save breakpoints .gdbinit
. Later,
this file could be loaded via source [filename]
command. See above.
debug_load_cmd
¶Specify a command which will be used to load program/firmware to a target device. Possible options:
load
- default option
some command
- pass any debugging client command (GDB, etc.)
load address
- load program at specified address, where “address”
should be a valid number
preload
- some embedded devices have locked Flash Memory (a few
Freescale Kinetis and NXP LPC boards). In this case, firmware loading using
debugging client is disabled. preload
command instructs
PlatformIO Core (CLI) to load program/firmware using development platform “upload”
method (via bootloader, media disk, etc)
(empty value, debug_load_cmd =
), disables program loading at all.
debug_load_mode
¶Allows to control when PlatformIO should load debugging firmware to the end target. Possible options:
always
- load for the each debugging session, default
modified
- load only when firmware was modified
manual
- do not load firmware automatically. You are responsible to
pre-flash target with debugging firmware in this case.
debug_server
¶Allows to setup a custom debugging server. By default, boards are pre-configured with a debugging server that is compatible with “on-board” debugging tool (adapter, probe). Also, this option is useful for a Custom debugging tool.
Option format (multi-line):
First line is an executable path of debugging server
2-nd and the next lines are arguments for executable file
Example:
[env:debug]
platform = ...
board = ...
debug_server =
/path/to/debugging/server
arg1
arg2
...
argN
debug_port
¶A debugging port of a remote target. Could be a serial device or network address. PlatformIO detects it automatically if is not specified.
For example:
/dev/ttyUSB0
- Unix-based OS
COM3
- Windows OS
localhost:3333
debug_svd_path
¶A custom path to SVD file which contains information about device peripherals.