kuria / debug
Collection of useful debugging utilities
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Requires
- php: >=7.1
- ext-mbstring: *
Requires (Dev)
- kuria/dev-meta: ^0.5
README
Collection of useful debugging utilities.
Contents
Requirements
PHP 7.1+
Dumper
Utilities for inspecting arbitrary values.
Dumping any value
Dumping arbitrary PHP values with nesting and string length limits.
<?php use Kuria\Debug\Dumper; $values = [ 'foo bar', 123, -123, 1.53, -1.53, true, false, fopen('php://stdin', 'r'), null, array(1, 2, 3), new \stdClass(), ]; echo Dumper::dump($values);
Output:
array[11] { [0] => "foo bar" [1] => 123 [2] => -123 [3] => 1.530000 [4] => -1.530000 [5] => true [6] => false [7] => resource(stream#10) [8] => NULL [9] => array[3] [10] => object(stdClass) }
- see other arguments of
dump()
for nesting and string limits - if an object implements the
__debugInfo()
method, its output will be used instead of the properties - if an object implements the
__toString()
method, its output will be used instead of its properties if:- it has no properties
- the properties cannot be displayed due to the nesting limit
- if an object implements the
\DateTimeInterface
, its value will be formatted as a string
Dumping strings
Safely dumping arbitrary strings. All ASCII < 32 will be escaped in C style.
<?php use Kuria\Debug\Dumper; echo Dumper::dumpString("Foo\nBar");
Output:
Foo\nBar
Dumping string as HEX
Useful for dumping binary data or examining actual bytes of a text.
<?php use Kuria\Debug\Dumper; echo Dumper::dumpStringAsHex("Lorem\nIpsum\nDolor\nSit\nAmet\n");
Output:
0 : 4c 6f 72 65 6d 0a 49 70 73 75 6d 0a 44 6f 6c 6f [Lorem.Ipsum.Dolo] 10 : 72 0a 53 69 74 0a 41 6d 65 74 0a [r.Sit.Amet.]
Getting object properties
<?php use Kuria\Debug\Dumper; class Foo { public static $staticProperty = 'lorem'; public $publicProperty = 'ipsum'; private $privateProperty = 'dolor'; } print_r(Dumper::getObjectProperties(new Foo()));
Output:
Array ( [staticProperty] => ReflectionProperty Object ( [name] => staticProperty [class] => Foo\Foo ) [publicProperty] => ReflectionProperty Object ( [name] => publicProperty [class] => Foo\Foo ) [privateProperty] => ReflectionProperty Object ( [name] => privateProperty [class] => Foo\Foo ) )
Output
Utilities related to PHP's output system.
Cleaning output buffers
<?php use Kuria\Debug\Output; // clean all buffers Output::cleanBuffers(); // clean buffers up to a certain level Output::cleanBuffers(2); // clean all buffers and catch exceptions $bufferedOutput = Output::cleanBuffers(null, true);
Capturing output buffers
<?php use Kuria\Debug\Output; // capture all buffers Output::captureBuffers(); // capture buffers up to a certain level Output::captureBuffers(2); // capture all buffers and catch exceptions $bufferedOutput = Output::captureBuffers(null, true);
Replacing all headers
Replace all headers (unless they've been sent already):
<?php use Kuria\Debug\Output; Output::replaceHeaders(['Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8']);
Error
PHP error utilities.
Getting name of a PHP error code
<?php use Kuria\Debug\Error; var_dump(Error::getName(E_USER_ERROR));
Output:
string(10) "E_USER_ERROR"
Exception
Exception utilities.
Rendering an exception
<?php use Kuria\Debug\Exception; $invalidArgumentException = new \InvalidArgumentException('Bad argument', 123); $runtimeException = new \RuntimeException('Something went wrong', 0, $invalidArgumentException); echo Exception::render($runtimeException);
Output:
RuntimeException: Something went wrong in example.php on line 6 #0 {main}
Including all previous exceptions and excluding the traces
<?php echo Exception::render($runtimeException, false, true);
Output:
[1/2] RuntimeException: Something went wrong in example.php on line 6 [2/2] InvalidArgumentException (123): Bad argument in example.php on line 5
Getting a list of all previous exceptions
<?php use Kuria\Debug\Exception; try { try { throw new \InvalidArgumentException('Invalid parameter'); } catch (\InvalidArgumentException $e) { throw new \RuntimeException('Something went wrong', 0, $e); } } catch (\RuntimeException $e) { $exceptions = Exception::getChain($e); foreach ($exceptions as $exception) { echo $exception->getMessage(), "\n"; } }
Output:
Something went wrong Invalid parameter
Joining exception chains together
Joining exception chains has some uses in exception-handling code where additional exception may be thrown.
<?php use Kuria\Debug\Exception; $c = new \Exception('C'); $b = new \Exception('B', 0, $c); $a = new \Exception('A', 0, $b); $z = new \Exception('Z'); $y = new \Exception('Y', 0, $z); $x = new \Exception('X', 0, $y); // print current chains echo "A's chain:\n", Exception::render($a, false, true), "\n\n"; echo "X's chain:\n", Exception::render($x, false, true), "\n\n"; // join chains (any number of exceptions can be passed) // from right to left: the last previous exception is joined to the exception on the left Exception::joinChains($a, $x); // print the modified X chain echo "X's modified chain:\n", Exception::render($x, false, true), "\n";
Output:
A's chain: [1/3] Exception: A in example.com on line 7 [2/3] Exception: B in example.com on line 6 [3/3] Exception: C in example.com on line 5 X's chain: [1/3] Exception: X in example.com on line 11 [2/3] Exception: Y in example.com on line 10 [3/3] Exception: Z in example.com on line 9 X's modified chain: [1/6] Exception: X in example.com on line 11 [2/6] Exception: Y in example.com on line 10 [3/6] Exception: Z in example.com on line 9 [4/6] Exception: A in example.com on line 7 [5/6] Exception: B in example.com on line 6 [6/6] Exception: C in example.com on line 5
Simplified real-world example
Without joining exception chains
<?php use Kuria\Debug\Exception; // print uncaught exceptions set_exception_handler(function ($uncaughtException) { echo Exception::render($uncaughtException, false, true); }); try { // some code which may throw an exception throw new \Exception('Initial exception'); } catch (\Exception $exception) { // handle the exception try { // some elaborate exception-handling code which may also throw an exception throw new \Exception('Exception-handler exception'); } catch (\Exception $additionalException) { // the exception-handling code has crashed throw new \Exception('Final exception', 0, $additionalException); } }
Output:
[1/2] Exception: Final exception in example.php on line 20 [2/2] Exception: Exception-handler exception in example.php on line 17
Notice that the information about Initial exception is lost completely.
We could glue the Initial exception's info to the Final exception's message, but that would be rather ugly and hard to read.
With joining exception chains
<?php try { // some code which may throw an exception throw new \Exception('Initial exception'); } catch (\Exception $exception) { // handle the exception try { // some elaborate exception-handling code which may also throw an exception throw new \Exception('Exception-handler exception'); } catch (\Exception $additionalException) { // the exception-handling code has crashed // join exception chains Exception::joinChains($exception, $additionalException); throw new \Exception('Something went wrong while handling an exception', 0, $additionalException); } }
Output:
[1/3] Exception: Something went wrong while handling an exception in example.php on line 24 [2/3] Exception: Exception-handler exception in /example.php on line 17 [3/3] Exception: Initial exception in example.php on line 12
Now the Initial exception is accessible as one of the previous exceptions.