My company has a program that uses Lua embedded in its runtime, loading up .lua files from disk and executing functions defined in them repeatedly.
Is there a way to attach to the running process and set breakpoints in my .lua files? (I’d accept either gdb-style command-line debugging as part of the Lua distribution, or perhaps a third-party IDE that provides Visual-Studio-like GUI breakpoints.)
Or is what I’m asking for entirely nonsensical and impossible given the nature of the runtime loading up random files from disk?
Edit: Looks like it’s not nonsensical, given that Lua’s own debug.getinfo() function can determine the source file for a given function, and debug.sethook() allows a callback for each new line of code entered. So, it’s reasonable to load source code from disk and be able to tell when the interpreter is executing a particular line of code from that file. The question remains: how do I latch onto an existing process that has a Lua interpreter and inject my own trace function (which can then watch for file/line number pairs and pause execution)?
This is an alternative I use after much searching. If you have an external executable that loads lua, I got this working in a few minutes. The op is very responsive, it has an interactive debugger which loads your code you can place debug points interactively. It doesn’t have an editor, but I use scite or crimson editor and start the executable, one line in your main lua module enables the debugger.
http://www.cushy-code.com/grld/ – this link seems dead now
I’ve moved to eclipse.org/ldt it has an ide and integrated debugger, recommended
hth