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Getting VB.NET line numbers in stack trace

I have a VB.NET 2010 Winforms application where I'd like to include line numbers in the stack trace. I've read the following question and answers:

how to print out line number during application run in VB.net

Which mentions "you always need to include the PDB file with your code, which contains debugging information that is used in situations like this". Under advanced compiler settings I've tried "Generate debug info" as "pdb-only" and "full" for my release build and confirmed that a fresh PDB file is generated in the same directory as my EXE. However the following test code generates a line number of zero for each stack frame and doesn't return a filename:

    Dim st As StackTrace = New StackTrace(ex)
    For Each sf As StackFrame In st.GetFrames
        MsgBox("Line " & sf.GetFileLineNumber() & sf.GetFileName)
    Next

However the following code straight after it generates an otherwise good looking stack trace so it doesn't seem to be a problem with the exception handler in general:

ExceptionDetails.Text = ex.GetType.ToString & "(0x" & hr.ToString("X8") & "): " & ex.Message & vbCrLf & ex.StackTrace

I can't seem to find any other likely settings under the project configuration and wondered if anyone had ideas on other things that may cause this problem. All the solutions I've found searching here and elsewhere just seem to suggest making sure the PDB is in the same path as the executable.

like image 246
PeterJ Avatar asked Dec 27 '12 00:12

PeterJ


2 Answers

This question was solved some time back but I thought I'd share the final working function that I've been including in my projects recently. It returns the initial exception information and full stack trace at that point followed by the line numbers and filenames leading up to the exception from the stack trace.

Public Function GetExceptionInfo(ex As Exception) As String
    Dim Result As String
    Dim hr As Integer = Runtime.InteropServices.Marshal.GetHRForException(ex)
    Result = ex.GetType.ToString & "(0x" & hr.ToString("X8") & "): " & ex.Message & Environment.NewLine & ex.StackTrace & Environment.NewLine
    Dim st As StackTrace = New StackTrace(ex, True)
    For Each sf As StackFrame In st.GetFrames
        If sf.GetFileLineNumber() > 0 Then
            Result &= "Line:" & sf.GetFileLineNumber() & " Filename: " & IO.Path.GetFileName(sf.GetFileName) & Environment.NewLine
        End If
    Next
    Return Result
End Function
like image 111
PeterJ Avatar answered Oct 20 '22 02:10

PeterJ


From the documentation of the constructor you're calling:

The StackTrace is created with the caller's current thread, and does not contain file name, line number, or column information.

Try using:

Dim st As StackTrace = New StackTrace(ex, True)

instead, which uses this constructor. The second constructor parameter is described as:

true to capture the file name, line number, and column number; otherwise, false.

like image 36
Jon Skeet Avatar answered Oct 20 '22 04:10

Jon Skeet