To improve my Go workflow I wanted to tie a Go code debugger into VIM.

Even though Go is a mature language there doesn’t seem to be an officially supported debugger at this point in time.

I found 3 different projects:

Godebug has been abandoned since September 2015. At this point Delve seems to be the most promising debugger for Go. Delve has been integrated into IntelliJ and Visual Studio Code. Unfortunately there is no VIM integration available. There has been a ticket discussing integrating delve into vim-go but the ticket has been rejected.

The only viable option at the moment seems to be to integrate GDB into VIM. GDB is the debugger listed in the official Go documentation. The documentation also contains this caveat:

GDB does not understand Go programs well. The stack management, threading, and runtime contain aspects that differ enough from the execution model GDB expects that they can confuse the debugger, even when the program is compiled with gccgo. As a consequence, although GDB can be useful in some situations, it is not a reliable debugger for Go programs, particularly heavily concurrent ones. Moreover, it is not a priority for the Go project to address these issues, which are difficult. In short, the instructions below should be taken only as a guide to how to use GDB when it works, not as a guarantee of success.

I haven’t done any concurrent debugging tests with Go and GDB but I could successfully debug any non-concurrent code with GDB. I tested this with a variety of projects and despite the discouraging message in the documentation, GBD worked very stable and reliable during all my tests. I decided to go for GDB for now till there is a better option available.

To integrate GDB into VIM you need 2 plugins:

Plugin 'fatih/vim-go' Plugin 'vim-scripts/Conque-GDB'

Anybody who develops Go in VIM will be familiar with vim-go. It ties Go into VIM very nicely and is basically the default VIM plugin for Go developers. Vim-go also forms the basis for debugging Go with Conque-GDB. Conque-GDB is just a generic GDB plugin for VIM, but it works very well with Go.

After installing both plugins you need to add the following lines to your .vimrc

let g:ConqueTerm_Color = 2 let g:ConqueTerm_CloseOnEnd = 1 let g:ConqueTerm_StartMessages = 0 function DebugSession() silent make -o vimgdb -gcflags "-N -l" redraw! if (filereadable("vimgdb")) ConqueGdb vimgdb else echom "Couldn't find debug file" endif endfunction function DebugSessionCleanup(term) if (filereadable("vimgdb")) let ds=delete("vimgdb") endif endfunction call conque_term#register_function("after_close", "DebugSessionCleanup") nmap <leader>d :call DebugSession()<CR>;

With these settings in place you can start a GDB debug session simply by typing <leader>d.

This will

Compile your app with the recommended debug switches Start a debug session with the generated binary Clean up after you complete debugging

If you see the following error message when starting a debug session:

warning: File "/usr/local/go/src/runtime/runtime-gdb.py" auto-loading has been declined by your `auto-load safe-path' set to "$debugdir:$datadir/auto-load". To enable execution of this file add add-auto-load-safe-path /usr/local/go/src/runtime/runtime-gdb.py line to your configuration file "/home/example/.gdbinit"

Then simply create a file called .gdbinit in your home directory and add this line to it:

add-auto-load-safe-path /usr/local/go/src/runtime/runtime-gdb.py

If you have Go installed somewhere else you need to adjust the path accordingly.

Once the debug session started you have the following actions available in your buffer:

<leader>r: Run

<leader>c: Continue

<leader>n: Execute next line

<leader>p: Print variable under cursor

<leader>b: Toggle breakpoint

You can switch between the debug window and your buffer using the regular <ctrl>w movements. If you want to type commands directly into the debug window you can switch there and enable insert mode. To switch back to the buffer you need to exit insert mode first.

Apart from the provided Conque-GDB mappings the GDB command line offers quite a few additional features:

p variablename: Print variable

bt: Print backtrace

info goroutines: Go routine list

goroutine n bt: Print backtrace for a specific goroutine

b main.go:5: Add a breakpoint to main.go on line 5

d 8: Delete breakpoint number 8

quit: End debug session

You can find the full list in the Go GDB documentation.

Here some screenshots of an example debug session:



Edit:

/u/KenjiTakahashi pointed out that there is the vim-godebug plugin. Vim-godebug has Delve support. Unfortunately only works for NeoVim. At the time of writing this plugin is only a week old. I assume there will me more development in the future and maybe even Vim support.