Dev:Debugserver

debugserver is a console app that acts as server for remote gdb or lldb debugging. It is installed when a device is marked for development. It can be found in /Developer/usr/bin/debugserver. This is also the process invoked by Xcode to debug applications on the device.

If you're using iOS 7, see Debugging on iOS 7 for more context.

= Command line options =

debugserver [ ] host: [ ...]

options can be as follows:

= Patching for process attaching =

The vanilla debugserver lacks the task_for_pid entitlement. For building and debugging your own apps on a properly provisioned device, this is not a problem; assuming your project and device are properly configured with your active iOS Developer Program, debugserver should have no trouble attaching to an app built and sent down to the device by Xcode. However, debugserver cannot attach to any other processes, including other apps from the App Store, due to lack of entitlement to allow task_for_pid. An entitlement must be inserted into the binary to allow this. '''Note: The /Developer directory is actually a mounted read-only ramdisk. You cannot add any entitlements to the copy of debugserver installed there; it must be extracted to another directory and used from there.'''

0.

1. Thin the binary because ldid does not support fat binaries:

2. Save the following as ent.xml</tt>:

3. Apply the entitlement with ldid</tt>: ldid -Sent.xml debugserver

= Attaching to a process =

1. On the device, type: ./debugserver 0.0.0.0:1234 -a "YouTube"

Example: My-iPhone-5S:~ root# ./debugserver *:1234 -a "YouTube" debugserver-300.2 for arm64. Attaching to process YouTube... Spawning general listening thread. Spawning kqueue listening thread. Listening to port 1234 for a connection from *...

2. On your Mac, launch lldb and type the following commands (but replace the IP with your device's IP): platform select remote-ios process connect connect://192.168.2.104:1234

Example: mbkim:Debug_Server Kim$ lldb (lldb) platform select remote-ios Platform: remote-ios Connected: no  SDK Path: "/Applications/Xcode.app/Contents/Developer/Platforms/iPhoneOS.platform/DeviceSupport/7.0" SDK Roots: [ 0] "/Applications/Xcode.app/Contents/Developer/Platforms/iPhoneOS.platform/DeviceSupport/4.2" [...] SDK Roots: [21] "/Users/Kim/Library/Developer/Xcode/iOS DeviceSupport/7.0.4 (11B554a)" (lldb) process connect connect://192.168.2.104:1234 Process 2612 stopped * thread #1: tid = 0x30d1e, 0x3ba51a84 libsystem_kernel.dylib`mach_msg_trap + 20, queue = 'com.apple.main-thread, stop reason = signal SIGSTOP frame #0: 0x3ba51a84 libsystem_kernel.dylib`mach_msg_trap + 20 libsystem_kernel.dylib`mach_msg_trap + 20: -> 0x3ba51a84: pop    {r4, r5, r6, r8} 0x3ba51a88: bx     lr libsystem_kernel.dylib`mach_msg_overwrite_trap: 0x3ba51a8c: mov    r12, sp    0x3ba51a90:  push   {r4, r5, r6, r8} (lldb) po [[UIApplication sharedApplication] delegate] <YTAppDelegate: 0x15e635a0> (lldb)

Debugging through USB instead of WiFi
If you find that debugging through WiFi is a little slow, or if you need to debug an app while WiFi is off, you can use usbmuxd to connect through USB. Refer to SSH Over USB, replacing the source and destination ports with  and using localhost</tt> instead of an IP.

Connect with lldb: (lldb) process connect connect://localhost:1234 Process 2612 stopped ...

= Example session (old instructions) =

'''Note: these instructions only work on iOS 6 and older. For iOS 7, follow the example above.'''

1. Copy MobileNotes to your Mac, e.g. to /Developer/Platforms/iPhoneOS.platform/Developer/SDKs/iPhoneOS3.1.sdk/Applications/MobileNotes.app/MobileNotes</tt>.

2. On the device, type: ~/debugserver -x spring host:6789 /Applications/MobileNotes.app/MobileNotes This will launch MobileNotes and wait for the remote debugger.

3. Launch the debugger and attach it to the remote process: If using GDB: set shlib-path-substitutions / /Developer/Platforms/iPhoneOS.platform/Developer/SDKs/iPhoneOS3.1.sdk/ file /Developer/Platforms/iPhoneOS.platform/Developer/SDKs/iPhoneOS3.1.sdk/Applications/MobileNotes.app/MobileNotes target remote-macosx 192.168.1.101:6789 Where 192.168.1.101 should be replaced by the actual IP address of your device. The remote debug connection is now complete.
 * On your Mac, launch /Developer/Platforms/iPhoneOS.platform/Developer/usr/libexec/gdb/gdb-arm-apple-darwin</tt>.
 * Type the following in gdb</tt>:

If using LLDB: platform select remote-ios process connect connect://192.168.1.101:6789
 * On your Mac, launch lldb</tt>.
 * Type the following in lldb</tt>:

4. Enter c</tt> to continue and do whatever you want.

= External links =


 * iphone-debugserver project