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'\" t
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.\" Copyright (c) 1995, 2013, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.
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.\"
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.\" DO NOT ALTER OR REMOVE COPYRIGHT NOTICES OR THIS FILE HEADER.
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.\"
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.\" This code is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
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.\" under the terms of the GNU General Public License version 2 only, as
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.\" published by the Free Software Foundation.
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.\"
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.\" This code is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT
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.\" ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or
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.\" FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License
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.\" version 2 for more details (a copy is included in the LICENSE file that
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.\" accompanied this code).
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.\"
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.\" You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License version
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.\" 2 along with this work; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation,
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.\" Inc., 51 Franklin St, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA.
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.\"
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.\" Please contact Oracle, 500 Oracle Parkway, Redwood Shores, CA 94065 USA
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.\" or visit www.oracle.com if you need additional information or have any
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.\" questions.
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.\"
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.\" Arch: generic
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.\" Software: JDK 8
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.\" Date: 21 November 2013
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.\" SectDesc: Basic Tools
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.\" Title: jdb.1
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.\"
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.if n .pl 99999
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.TH jdb 1 "21 November 2013" "JDK 8" "Basic Tools"
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.\" http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/groff/2009-02/msg00013.html
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.\" ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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.\" -----------------------------------------------------------------
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.\" * MAIN CONTENT STARTS HERE *
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.\" -----------------------------------------------------------------
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21743
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.SH NAME
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jdb \- Finds and fixes bugs in Java platform programs\&.
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.SH SYNOPSIS
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.sp
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.nf
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\fBjdb\fR [\fIoptions\fR] [\fIclassname\fR] [\fIarguments\fR]
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.fi
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.sp
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.TP
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\fIoptions\fR
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Command-line options\&. See Options\&.
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.TP
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\fIclass\fRname
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Name of the main class to debug\&.
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.TP
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\fIarguments\fR
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Arguments passed to the \f3main()\fR method of the class\&.
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.SH DESCRIPTION
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The Java Debugger (JDB) is a simple command-line debugger for Java classes\&. The \f3jdb\fR command and its options call the JDB\&. The \f3jdb\fR command demonstrates the Java Platform Debugger Architecture (JDBA) and provides inspection and debugging of a local or remote Java Virtual Machine (JVM)\&. See Java Platform Debugger Architecture (JDBA) at http://docs\&.oracle\&.com/javase/8/docs/technotes/guides/jpda/index\&.html
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.SS START\ A\ JDB\ SESSION
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There are many ways to start a JDB session\&. The most frequently used way is to have JDB launch a new JVM with the main class of the application to be debugged\&. Do this by substituting the \f3jdb\fR command for the \f3java\fR command in the command line\&. For example, if your application\&'s main class is \f3MyClass\fR, then use the following command to debug it under JDB:
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.sp
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.nf
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\f3jdb MyClass\fP
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.fi
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.nf
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\f3\fP
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.fi
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.sp
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When started this way, the \f3jdb\fR command calls a second JVM with the specified parameters, loads the specified class, and stops the JVM before executing that class\&'s first instruction\&.
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.PP
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Another way to use the \f3jdb\fR command is by attaching it to a JVM that is already running\&. Syntax for starting a JVM to which the \f3jdb\fR command attaches when the JVM is running is as follows\&. This loads in-process debugging libraries and specifies the kind of connection to be made\&.
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.sp
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.nf
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\f3java \-agentlib:jdwp=transport=dt_socket,server=y,suspend=n MyClass\fP
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.fi
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.nf
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\f3\fP
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.fi
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.sp
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You can then attach the \f3jdb\fR command to the JVM with the following command:
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.sp
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.nf
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\f3jdb \-attach 8000\fP
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.fi
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.nf
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\f3\fP
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.fi
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.sp
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The \f3MyClass\fR argument is not specified in the \f3jdb\fR command line in this case because the \f3jdb\fR command is connecting to an existing JVM instead of launching a new JVM\&.
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.PP
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There are many other ways to connect the debugger to a JVM, and all of them are supported by the \f3jdb\fR command\&. The Java Platform Debugger Architecture has additional documentation on these connection options\&.
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.SS BASIC\ JDB\ COMMANDS
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The following is a list of the basic \f3jdb\fR commands\&. The JDB supports other commands that you can list with the \f3-help\fR option\&.
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.TP
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help or ?
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The \f3help\fR or \f3?\fR commands display the list of recognized commands with a brief description\&.
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.TP
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run
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After you start JDB and set breakpoints, you can use the \f3run\fR command to execute the debugged application\&. The \f3run\fR command is available only when the \f3jdb\fR command starts the debugged application as opposed to attaching to an existing JVM\&.
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.TP
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cont
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Continues execution of the debugged application after a breakpoint, exception, or step\&.
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.TP
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print
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Displays Java objects and primitive values\&. For variables or fields of primitive types, the actual value is printed\&. For objects, a short description is printed\&. See the dump command to find out how to get more information about an object\&.
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\fINote:\fR To display local variables, the containing class must have been compiled with the \f3javac -g\fR option\&.
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The \f3print\fR command supports many simple Java expressions including those with method invocations, for example:
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.sp
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.nf
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\f3print MyClass\&.myStaticField\fP
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.fi
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.nf
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\f3print myObj\&.myInstanceField\fP
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.fi
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.nf
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\f3print i + j + k (i, j, k are primities and either fields or local variables)\fP
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.fi
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.nf
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\f3print myObj\&.myMethod() (if myMethod returns a non\-null)\fP
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.fi
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.nf
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\f3print new java\&.lang\&.String("Hello")\&.length()\fP
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.fi
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.nf
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\f3\fP
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.fi
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.sp
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.TP
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dump
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For primitive values, the \f3dump\fR command is identical to the \f3print\fR command\&. For objects, the \f3dump\fR command prints the current value of each field defined in the object\&. Static and instance fields are included\&. The \f3dump\fR command supports the same set of expressions as the \f3print\fR command\&.
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.TP
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threads
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List the threads that are currently running\&. For each thread, its name and current status are printed and an index that can be used in other commands\&. In this example, the thread index is 4, the thread is an instance of \f3java\&.lang\&.Thread\fR, the thread name is \f3main\fR, and it is currently running\&.
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.sp
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.nf
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\f34\&. (java\&.lang\&.Thread)0x1 main running\fP
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.fi
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.nf
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\f3\fP
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.fi
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.sp
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.TP
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thread
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Select a thread to be the current thread\&. Many \f3jdb\fR commands are based on the setting of the current thread\&. The thread is specified with the thread index described in the threads command\&.
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.TP
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where
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The \f3where\fR command with no arguments dumps the stack of the current thread\&. The \f3where\fR\f3all\fR command dumps the stack of all threads in the current thread group\&. The \f3where\fR\f3threadindex\fR command dumps the stack of the specified thread\&.
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If the current thread is suspended either through an event such as a breakpoint or through the \f3suspend\fR command, then local variables and fields can be displayed with the \f3print\fR and \f3dump\fR commands\&. The \f3up\fR and \f3down\fR commands select which stack frame is the current stack frame\&.
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.SS BREAKPOINTS
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Breakpoints can be set in JDB at line numbers or at the first instruction of a method, for example:
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.TP 0.2i
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\(bu
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The command \f3stop at MyClass:22\fR sets a breakpoint at the first instruction for line 22 of the source file containing \f3MyClass\fR\&.
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.TP 0.2i
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\(bu
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The command \f3stop in java\&.lang\&.String\&.length\fR sets a breakpoint at the beginning of the method \f3java\&.lang\&.String\&.length\fR\&.
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.TP 0.2i
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\(bu
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The command \f3stop in MyClass\&.<clinit>\fR uses \f3<clinit>\fR to identify the static initialization code for \f3MyClass\fR\&.
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.PP
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When a method is overloaded, you must also specify its argument types so that the proper method can be selected for a breakpoint\&. For example, \f3MyClass\&.myMethod(int,java\&.lang\&.String)\fR or \f3MyClass\&.myMethod()\fR\&.
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.PP
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The \f3clear\fR command removes breakpoints using the following syntax: \f3clear MyClass:45\fR\&. Using the \f3clear\fR or \f3stop\fR command with no argument displays a list of all breakpoints currently set\&. The \f3cont\fR command continues execution\&.
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.SS STEPPING
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The \f3step\fR command advances execution to the next line whether it is in the current stack frame or a called method\&. The \f3next\fR command advances execution to the next line in the current stack frame\&.
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.SS EXCEPTIONS
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When an exception occurs for which there is not a \f3catch\fR statement anywhere in the throwing thread\&'s call stack, the JVM typically prints an exception trace and exits\&. When running under JDB, however, control returns to JDB at the offending throw\&. You can then use the \f3jdb\fR command to diagnose the cause of the exception\&.
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.PP
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Use the \f3catch\fR command to cause the debugged application to stop at other thrown exceptions, for example: \f3catch java\&.io\&.FileNotFoundException\fR or \f3catch\fR\f3mypackage\&.BigTroubleException\fR\&. Any exception that is an instance of the specified class or subclass stops the application at the point where it is thrown\&.
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.PP
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The \f3ignore\fR command negates the effect of an earlier \f3catch\fR command\&. The \f3ignore\fR command does not cause the debugged JVM to ignore specific exceptions, but only to ignore the debugger\&.
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.SH OPTIONS
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When you use the \f3jdb\fR command instead of the \f3java\fR command on the command line, the \f3jdb\fR command accepts many of the same options as the \f3java\fR command, including \f3-D\fR, \f3-classpath\fR, and \f3-X\fR options\&. The following list contains additional options that are accepted by the \f3jdb\fR command\&.
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.PP
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Other options are supported to provide alternate mechanisms for connecting the debugger to the JVM it is to debug\&. For additional documentation about these connection alternatives, see Java Platform Debugger Architecture (JPDA) at http://docs\&.oracle\&.com/javase/8/docs/technotes/guides/jpda/index\&.html
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.TP
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-help
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.br
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Displays a help message\&.
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.TP
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-sourcepath \fIdir1:dir2: \&. \&. \&.\fR
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.br
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Uses the specified path to search for source files in the specified path\&. If this option is not specified, then use the default path of dot (\&.)\&.
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.TP
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-attach \fIaddress\fR
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.br
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Attaches the debugger to a running JVM with the default connection mechanism\&.
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.TP
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-listen \fIaddress\fR
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.br
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Waits for a running JVM to connect to the specified address with a standard connector\&.
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.TP
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-launch
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.br
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Starts the debugged application immediately upon startup of JDB\&. The \f3-launch\fR option removes the need for the \f3run\fR command\&. The debugged application is launched and then stopped just before the initial application class is loaded\&. At that point, you can set any necessary breakpoints and use the \f3cont\fR command to continue execution\&.
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.TP
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-listconnectors
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.br
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List the connectors available in this JVM\&.
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.TP
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-connect connector-name:\fIname1=value1\fR
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.br
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Connects to the target JVM with the named connector and listed argument values\&.
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.TP
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-dbgtrace [\fIflags\fR]
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.br
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Prints information for debugging the \f3jdb\fR command\&.
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.TP
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-tclient
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.br
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Runs the application in the Java HotSpot VM client\&.
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.TP
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-tserver
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.br
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Runs the application in the Java HotSpot VM server\&.
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.TP
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-J\fIoption\fR
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.br
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Passes \f3option\fR to the JVM, where option is one of the options described on the reference page for the Java application launcher\&. For example, \f3-J-Xms48m\fR sets the startup memory to 48 MB\&. See java(1)\&.
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.SH OPTIONS\ FORWARDED\ TO\ THE\ DEBUGGER\ PROCESS
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.TP
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-v -verbose[:\fIclass\fR|gc|jni]
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.br
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Turns on verbose mode\&.
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.TP
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-D\fIname\fR=\fIvalue\fR
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.br
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Sets a system property\&.
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.TP
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-classpath \fIdir\fR
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.br
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Lists directories separated by colons in which to look for classes\&.
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.TP
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-X\fIoption\fR
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.br
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Nonstandard target JVM option\&.
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.SH SEE\ ALSO
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.TP 0.2i
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\(bu
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javac(1)
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.TP 0.2i
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\(bu
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java(1)
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.TP 0.2i
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\(bu
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javah(1)
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.TP 0.2i
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\(bu
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javap(1)
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.RE
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.br
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'pl 8.5i
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'bp
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