• Quacksalber@sh.itjust.works
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    3 months ago

    Aren’t those almost always race condition bugs? The debugger slows execution, so the bug won’t appear when debugging.

    • BlueKey@fedia.ioOP
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      3 months ago

      Turned out that the bug ocurred randomly. The first tries I just had the “luck” that it only happened when the breakpoints were on.
      Fixed it by now btw.

        • BlueKey@fedia.ioOP
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          3 months ago

          I’m new to Go and wanted to copy some text-data from a stream into the outputstream of the HTTP response. I was copying the data to and from a []byte with a single Read() and Write() call and expexted everything to be copied as the buffer is always the size of the while data. Turns out Read() sometimes fills the whole buffer and sometimes don’t.
          Now I’m using io.Copy().

          • dfyx@lemmy.helios42.de
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            3 months ago

            Note that this isn’t specific to Go. Reading from stream-like data, be it TCP connections, files or whatever always comes with the risk that not all data is present in the local buffer yet. The vast majority of read operations returns the number of bytes that could be read and you should call them in a loop. Same of write operations actually, if you’re writing to a stream-like object as the write buffers may be smaller than what you’re trying to write.

            • bl_r@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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              3 months ago

              I’ve run into the same problem with an API server I wrote in rust. I noticed this bug 5 minutes before a demo and panicked, but fixed it with a 1 second sleep. Eventually, I implemented a more permanent fix by changing the simplistic io calls to ones better designed for streams

            • xthexder@l.sw0.com
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              3 months ago

              Ah yes… several years ago now I was working on a tool called Toxiproxy that (among other things) could slice up the stream chunks into many random small pieces before forwarding them along. It turned out to be very useful for testing applications for this kind of bug.

      • dunz@feddit.nu
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        3 months ago

        I had a bug like that today . A system showed 404, but about 50% of the time. Turns out I had two vhosts with the same name, and it hit them roughly evenly 😃

        • vortexsurfer@lemmy.world
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          3 months ago

          Had a similar thing at work not long ago.

          A newly deployed version of a component in our system was only partially working, and the failures seemed to be random. It’s a distributed system, so the error could be in many places. After reading the logs for a while I realized that only some messages were coming through (via a message queue) to this component, which made no sense. The old version (on a different server) had been stopped, I had verified it myself days earlier.

          Turns out that the server with the old version had been rebooted in the meantime, therefore the old component had started running again, and was listening to the same message queue! So it was fairly random which one actually received each message in the queue 😂

          Problem solved by stopping the old container again and removing it completely so it wouldn’t start again at the next boot.

    • ExtraMedicated@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      I had one years ago with internet explorer that ended up being because “console.log” was not defined in that browser unless you had the console window open. That was fun to troublshoot.

      • xthexder@l.sw0.com
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        3 months ago

        And that’s where Release with debug symbols comes in. Definitely harder to track down what’s going on when it skips 10 lines of code in one step though. Usually my code ends up the other way though, because debug mode has extra assertions to catch things like uninitialized memory or access-after-free (I think specifically MSVC sets memory to 0xcdcdcdcd on free in debug mode).

      • leisesprecher@feddit.org
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        3 months ago

        One of our customers does that. It happened multiple times already that one dev fixed an issue in production, and the next regular deployment overwrote everything.

        But fortunately, it’s just critical infrastructure and nothing important.

        • henfredemars@infosec.pub
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          3 months ago

          When I left my last job they were using the zip file method for version control and one creative developer managed to link two versions of libc at the same time.

          Software is so useful that the standard for utility is extremely low.

    • silly goose meekah@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      I once had a racing condition that got tipped over by the debugger. So similar behavior to what’s in the meme, but the code started working once I put in the print calls as well. I think I ended up just leaving the print calls, because I suck at async programming

      • Buddahriffic@lemmy.world
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        3 months ago

        Yeah, I was going to mention race conditions as soon as I saw the parent comment. Though I’d guess most cases where the debugger “fixes” the issue while print statements don’t are also race conditions, just the race isn’t tight enough that that extra IO time changes the result.

        Best way to be thorough with concurrency testing IMO involves using synchronization to deliberately check the results of each potential race going either way. Of course, this is an exponential problem if you really want to be thorough (like some races could be based on thread 1 getting one specific instruction in between two specific instructions in thread 2, or maybe a race involves more than 2 threads, which would make it exponentially grow the exponential problem).

        But a trick for print statement debugging race conditions is to keep your message short. Even better if you can just send a dword to some fast logger asynchronously (though be careful to not introduce more race conditions with this!).

        This is one of the reasons why concurrency is hard even for those who understand it well.

    • dejected_warp_core@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      Honestly, this is why I tell developers that work with/for me to build in logging, day one. Not only will you always have clarity in every environment, but you won’t run into cases where adding logging later makes races/deadlocks “go away mysteriously.” A lot of the time, attaching a debugger to stuff in production isn’t going to fly, so “printf debugging” like this is truly your best bet.

      To do this right, look into logging modules/libraries that support filtering, lazy evaluation, contexts, and JSON output for perfect SEIM compatibility (enterprise stuff like Splunk or ELK).

    • Lupec@lemm.ee
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      3 months ago

      Lol my workplace ships Angular in debug mode. Don’t worry though, the whole page kills itself if a dubious third-party library detects the console is open. Very secure and not brittle at all! Please send help

      • Barbarian@sh.itjust.works
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        3 months ago

        Blink-blink-blink. Blink. Blink. Blink. Blink-blink-blink.

        No, I don’t have something in my eyes, I swear I’m fine looks nervously at boss.

        • SteveTech@programming.dev
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          3 months ago

          I’ve seen some that activate an insane number of breakpoints, so that the page freezes when the dev tools open. Although Firefox let’s you disable breaking on breakpoints all together, so it only really stops those that don’t know what they’re doing.

    • MultipleAnimals@sopuli.xyz
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      3 months ago

      You can imagine how many node projects there are running in production with npm run. I have encountered js/ts/node devs that don’t even know that you should like, build your project, with npm build and then ship and serve the bundle.

  • Aceticon@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    Sound like a critical race condition or bad memory access (this latter only in languages with pointers).

    Since it’s HTTP(S) and judging by the average developer experience in the domain of multi-threading I’ve seen even for people doing stuff that naturally tends to involve multiple threads (such as networked access by multiple simultaneous clients), my bet is the former.

    PS: Yeah, I know it’s a joke, but I made the serious point anyways because it might be useful for somebody.

  • chad@sh.itjust.works
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    3 months ago

    I’m a contractor at a rocket launch service provider. The final build of the ground control software is compiled and deployed to the launch pad with debug flags enabled because of a “fly like you test” mandate.

    Millions of dollars and tons of time invested by brilliant people are riding on rockets that are launched using software with debug flags because of an “if it ain’t broke don’t fix it” mentality and archaic test strategies.

    • henfredemars@infosec.pub
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      3 months ago

      I’ve worked on ground systems and it’s actually come in handy two times in five years, usually where we had a hard-to-reproduce bug. Getting the info when the problem happens can occasionally be all the difference.

      Addendum: And usually we didn’t care about performance. Basically never.

  • vithigar@lemmy.ca
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    3 months ago

    For those of you who’ve never experienced the joy of PowerBuilder, this could often happen in their IDE due to debug mode actually altering the state of some variables.

    More specifically, if you watched a variable or property then it would be initialised to a default value by the debugger if it didn’t already exist, so any errors that were happening due to null values/references would just magically stop.

    Another fun one that made debugging difficult, “local” scoping is shared between multiple instances of the same event. So if you had, say, a mouse move event that fired ten times as the cursor transited a row and in that event you set something like integer li_current_x = xpos the most recent assignment would quash the value of li_current_x in every instance of that event that was currently executing.

  • Treczoks@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    Heisenbug. Nasty buggers, especially in my domain: Embedded Engineering. When you are in the debugger, the whole processor is stopped, missing tons of data coming in, missing interrupts, getting network timeouts, etc. More often than not, resuming makes no sense, and you have to get straight to reboot.

      • Treczoks@lemmy.world
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        3 months ago

        That’s why I work with an extraordinary diligence to avoid making errors from the very start. Debugging is only a measure of last resort.

  • whoisearth@lemmy.ca
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    3 months ago

    When I write APIs I like to set endpoints to return all status codes this way no matter what you’re doing you can always be confident you’re getting the expected status code.