Debugging Your Application¶
Table of Contents
Replace var_dump¶
While using XDebug and a good IDE can be indispensable to debug your application, sometimes a quick var_dump()
is
all you need. CodeIgniter makes that even better by bundling in the excellent Kint
debugging tool for PHP. This goes way beyond your usual tool, providing many alternate pieces of data, like formatting
timestamps into recognizable dates, showing you hexcodes as colors, display array data like a table for easy reading,
and much, much more.
Enabling Kint¶
By default, Kint is enabled in development and testing environments only. This can be altered by modifying
the $useKint
value in the environment configuration section of the main index.php file:
$useKint = true;
Using Kint¶
d()
The d()
method dumps all of the data it knows about the contents passed as the only parameter to the screen, and
allows the script to continue executing:
d($_SERVER);
ddd()
This method is identical to d()
, except that it also dies()
and no further code is executed this request.
trace()
This provides a backtrace to the current execution point, with Kint's own unique spin:
Kint::trace();
For more information, see Kint's page.
The Debug Toolbar¶
The Debug Toolbar provides at-a-glance information about the current page request, including benchmark results, queries you have ran, request and response data, and more. This can all prove very useful during development to help you debug and optimize.
注解
The Debug Toolbar is still under construction with several planned features not yet implemented.
Enabling the Toolbar¶
The toolbar is enabled by default in any environment _except_ production. It will be shown whenever the constant CI_DEBUG is defined and it's value is positive. This is defined in the boot files (i.e. application/Config/Boot/development.php) and can be modified there to determine what environments it shows itself in.
The toolbar itself is displayed as an After Filter. You can stop it from ever
running by removing it from the $globals
property of application/Config/Filters.php.
Choosing What to Show¶
CodeIgniter ships with several Collectors that, as the name implies, collect data to display on the toolbar. You can easily make your own to customize the toolbar. To determine which collectors are shown, again head over to the App configuration file:
public $toolbarCollectors = [
'CodeIgniter\Debug\Toolbar\Collectors\Timers',
'CodeIgniter\Debug\Toolbar\Collectors\Database',
'CodeIgniter\Debug\Toolbar\Collectors\Logs',
'CodeIgniter\Debug\Toolbar\Collectors\Views',
'CodeIgniter\Debug\Toolbar\Collectors\Cache',
'CodeIgniter\Debug\Toolbar\Collectors\Files',
'CodeIgniter\Debug\Toolbar\Collectors\Routes',
];
Comment out any collectors that you do not want to show. Add custom Collectors here by providing the fully-qualified class name. The exact collectors that appear here will affect which tabs are shown, as well as what information is shown on the Timeline.
The Collectors that ship with CodeIgniter are:
- Timers collects all of the benchmark data, both by the system and by your application.
- Database Displays a list of queries that all database connections have performed, and their execution time.
- Logs Any information that was logged will be displayed here. In long-running systems, or systems with many items being logged, this can cause memory issues and should be disabled.
- Views Displays render time for views on the timeline, and shows any data passed to the views on a separate tab.
- Cache Will display information about cache hits and misses, and execution times.
- Files displays a list of all files that have been loaded during this request.
- Routes displays information about the current route and all routes defined in the system.
Setting Benchmark Points¶
In order for the Profiler to compile and display your benchmark data you must name your mark points using specific syntax.
Please read the information on setting Benchmark points in the Benchmark Library page.
Creating Custom Collectors¶
Creating custom collectors is a straightforward task. You create a new class, fully-namespaced so that the autoloader
can locate it, that extends CodeIgniter\Debug\Toolbar\Collectors\BaseCollector
. This provides a number of methods
that you can override, and has four required class properties that you must correctly set depending on how you want
the Collector to work
<?php namespace MyNamespace;
use CodeIgniter\Debug\Toolbar\Collectors\BaseCollector;
class MyCollector extends BaseCollector
{
protected $hasTimeline = false;
protected $hasTabContent = false;
protected $hasVarData = false;
protected $title = '';
}
$hasTimeline should be set to true
for any Collector that wants to display information in the toolbar's
timeline. If this is true, you will need to implement the formatTimelineData()
method to format and return the
data for display.
$hasTabContent should be true
if the Collector wants to display its own tab with custom content. If this
is true, you will need to provide a $title
, implement the display()
method to render out tab's contents,
and might need to implement the getTitleDetails()
method if you want to display additional information just
to the right of the tab content's title.
$hasVarData should be true
if this Collector wants to add additional data to the Vars
tab. If this
is true, you will need to implement the getVarData()
method.
$title is displayed on open tabs.
Displaying a Toolbar Tab¶
To display a toolbar tab you must:
- Fill in
$title
with the text displayed as both the toolbar title and the tab header. - Set
$hasTabContent
totrue
. - Implement the
display()
method. - Optionally, implement the
getTitleDetails()
method.
The display()
creates the HTML that is displayed within the tab itself. It does not need to worry about
the title of the tab, as that is automatically handled by the toolbar. It should return a string of HTML.
The getTitleDetails()
method should return a string that is displayed just to the right of the tab's title.
it can be used to provide additional overview information. For example, the Database tab displays the total
number of queries across all connections, while the Files tab displays the total number of files.
Providing Timeline Data¶
To provide information to be displayed in the Timeline you must:
- Set
$hasTimeline
totrue
. - Implement the
formatTimelineData()
method.
The formatTimelineData()
method must return an array of arrays formatted in a way that the timeline can use
it to sort it correctly and display the correct information. The inner arrays must include the following information:
$data[] = [
'name' => '', // Name displayed on the left of the timeline
'component' => '', // Name of the Component listed in the middle of timeline
'start' => 0.00, // start time, like microtime(true)
'duration' => 0.00 // duration, like mircrotime(true) - microtime(true)
];
Providing Vars¶
To add data to the Vars tab you must:
- Set
$hasVarData
totrue
- Implement
getVarData()
method.
The getVarData()
method should return an array containing arrays of key/value pairs to display. The name of the
outer array's key is the name of the section on the Vars tab:
$data = [
'section 1' => [
'foo' => 'bar',
'bar' => 'baz'
],
'section 2' => [
'foo' => 'bar',
'bar' => 'baz'
]
];