- 1_8_6_287
- 1_8_7_72
- 1_8_7_330
- 1_9_1_378
- 1_9_2_180
- 1_9_3_125
- 1_9_3_392
- 2_1_10 (0)
- 2_2_9 (0)
- 2_4_6 (38)
- 2_5_5 (0)
- 2_6_3 (0)
- What's this?
A class that provides the functionality of Kernel#set_trace_func in a nice Object-Oriented API.
Example
We can use TracePoint to gather information specifically for exceptions:
trace = TracePoint.new(:raise) do |tp| p [tp.lineno, tp.event, tp.raised_exception] end #=> #<TracePoint:disabled> trace.enable #=> false 0 / 0 #=> [5, :raise, #<ZeroDivisionError: divided by 0>]
Events
If you don’t specify the type of events you want to listen for, TracePoint will include all available events.
Note do not depend on current event set, as this list is subject to change. Instead, it is recommended you specify the type of events you want to use.
To filter what is traced, you can pass any of the following as events:
:line |
execute code on a new line |
:class |
start a class or module definition |
:end |
finish a class or module definition |
:call |
call a Ruby method |
:return |
return from a Ruby method |
:c_call |
call a C-language routine |
:c_return |
return from a C-language routine |
:raise |
raise an exception |
:b_call |
event hook at block entry |
:b_return |
event hook at block ending |
:thread_begin |
event hook at thread beginning |
:thread_end |
event hook at thread ending |