Microsoft KB Archive/166275

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How to debug a native code Visual Basic Component in Visual C++

Article ID: 166275

Article Last Modified on 6/21/2006



APPLIES TO

  • Microsoft Visual Basic 5.0 Professional Edition
  • Microsoft Visual Basic 6.0 Professional Edition
  • Microsoft Visual Basic 5.0 Enterprise Edition
  • Microsoft Visual Basic 6.0 Enterprise Edition



This article was previously published under Q166275

SUMMARY

The Visual Basic 5.0 debugger allows you to debug your code at design time before you compile it into an .exe, .dll, or .ocx. If you are debugging Visual Basic-created COM components, you can debug them out-of-process by running multiple projects in the same instance of Visual Basic 5.0, or by running separate instances of Visual Basic 5.0 with the client running in one and the COM component running in the other.

If you want to debug your components after they are compiled, you cannot use the Visual Basic 5.0 debugger because it will only debug them at design time. To debug a compiled Visual Basic component, you will need to use the functionality of the Visual C++ 5.0 debugger. The following are situations when you may need to debug a compiled Visual Basic component:

  • if you are creating an ActiveX control for use in a container other than Visual Basic 5.0.
  • in an application execution environment such as Microsoft Transaction Server where you are only allowed to run compiled .dlls.
  • if you suspect your Visual Basic component is behaving differently at design time than it is compiled.

This article explains how to do this within the Microsoft Developer Studio environment. You will need to have Visual Basic 5.0 and Visual C++ 5.0 installed on your development machine to follow this example.

MORE INFORMATION

The following steps assume that you already have a Visual Basic 5.0-created Standard EXE (.exe), ActiveX DLL (.dll), ActiveX EXE (.exe), or ActiveX Control (.ocx) that you want to debug.

  1. In Visual Basic 5.0, open the Visual Basic project that you want to debug. From the File menu, choose Make <YourProject>.exe. Click the Options button and select the Compile tab. Choose Compile to Native Code and Create Symbolic Debug Info. Then select OK, and OK again to compile your component.
  2. From the Visual C++ 5.0 File menu, choose Open Workspace. In the Open Workspace dialog, set Files of Type to All files(*.*), and then select your compiled component.
  3. Again from the Visual C++ 5.0 File menu, choose Open (not Open Workspace), and open the Visual Basic module (.bas), form (.frm), or class (.cls) that you want to debug. Set break points (F9), watches, step-through instructions, etc., that you would for a normal program. You may also want to display variable information in the debug environment by going to the Visual C++ 5.0 Tools menu, selecting Options, and then selecting the Debug tab. In the Debug tab, place a check next to Display unicode strings.

    Variables on a separate thread cannot be watched. An example would be a background thread with an .ocx or a hidden vb background thread. Visual Basic globals are per-apartment or single-thread, so you will not see them on the stack if it is on another thread.
    1. Standard EXE: From the Build menu in Visual C++ 5.0, select Start Debug then Go, or press the F5 key. When your Visual Basic compiled component reaches the line you set a breakpoint on, it will stop in Visual C++ 5.0 and allow you to perform normal debug operations.
    2. ActiveX EXE, DLL, or OCX: It is a little different for DLLs in that you have to specify an exe to debug with. To do this, from the Project menu select Settings, and then click the Debug tab. In the Executable for debug session text box specify the .exe file that references your .dll. Now follow step 4a which will launch your executable and your .dll and the Visual C++ 5.0 debugger will come up where you set the breakpoint in your .dll.
    3. ActiveX DLL Running Under Microsoft Transaction Server (MTS): To set this up, select Settings from the Visual C++ 5.0 Project menu, and then click the Debug tab. In the Executable for debug session text box, specify MTX.EXE. Then, in the Program arguments text box place /p:{00000000-0000- 0000-0000- 000000000000} where you would replace the 0's with the actual MTS Package ID. The Package ID can be obtained by examining the properties of your package in the Transaction Server Explorer. Following step 4a above which will launch MTX.EXE and your .dll. Now run the base client .exe that makes a call into your COM component running under MTS and the Visual C++ 5.0 debugger will come up where you set the breakpoint in your .dll.
      1. Is the dll being called on the system path?
      2. Have you accidentally re-registered your com object's dll, thereby wiping out the MTS-alterations to the registry?
      3. Might you have multiple copies of your com object's dll laying around, and you're setting breakpoints in the one that doesn't get loaded?
      4. Similarly to 3, might you have multiple copies of your non-com dll laying around?
      5. There was one seemingly very stupid trick which was that you should copy your DLL with symbolic Information to the MTS directory and from there add that DLL as a package to the MTS explorer. If you do not do this, symbolic debugging inside the MTS component does not work.

        Also, make sure you kill all running mtx.exe's before starting up your copy in the debugger. When you start it up, does it run or does it shutdown immediately? Note any event log messages logged by MTS. To start from a safe starting point, you might want to completely delete your application, then recreate it, reinstall your component's dll, etc.
    4. ActiveX DLL Running Under Internet Information Server (IIS): Because IIS runs as an NT Service, you will need to give yourself permission to act as part of the operation system. To do this, go to NT Administrative Tools and select User Manager. If you are using User Manager for Domains in NT Server, make sure you have selected your machine name as the Domain from the File menu. Then, choose User Rights from the Policies menu. In the User Rights dialog box, place a check next to Show Advanced User Rights and select "Act as part of the operating system" from the combo box. Click the Add button and type in "domainxxx\userxxx" in the text area, or select your username from the listbox. Click OK and you should now have the correct privileges. To start the debugging session in Visual C++ 5.0, go to the Build menu, select Start Debug, then Attach to Process. Place a check next to Show System Processes, then select inetinfo and click OK. Now load a client .htm or .asp file that will make a call into your ActiveX component. If you follow the directions in step 3 above, you should now be able to walk through your Visual Basic code.
    Note it has been noted that following the guidelines in step 4d of this article, the breakpoint is not hit. After some tries you might find that, in order for the breakpoint to be hit, it is necessary to load the DLL being debugged in the Additional DLLs project settings. Moreover, the breakpoint is not hit the first time that the HTML page is called, unless you set the breakpoint after attach to process has been made. It was tested under Windows NT 4.0 Workstation SP3 with Peer Web Services and Visual Studio SP2.

Another Visual C++ feature is the ability to do cross-process and cross- machine debugging. If you are running in a debugger and call a .dll that has debugging info, it will automatically start another instance of the debugger and the source so that you can debug into it.

Note that if the .exe is compiled optimized for size or speed, lines of dead code will be compiled out of the project.



Additional query words: MTS MTX VIPER

Keywords: kbhowto kbusage KB166275