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How to: Debug ASP.NET Exceptions

Applies to: yesVisual Studio noVisual Studio for Mac

Note

This article applies to Visual Studio 2017. If you're looking for the latest Visual Studio documentation, see Visual Studio documentation. We recommend upgrading to the latest version of Visual Studio. Download it here

Debugging exceptions is an important part of developing a robust ASP.NET application. General information about how to debug exceptions is at Managing Exceptions with the Debugger.

To debug unhandled ASP.NET exceptions, you must make sure that the debugger stops for them. The ASP.NET runtime has a top-level exception handler. Therefore, the debugger never breaks on unhandled exceptions by default. To break into the debugger when an exception is thrown, you must select Break when an exception is: Thrown setting for that specific exception in the Exceptions dialog box.

If you have enabled Just My Code, Break when an exception is: Thrown does not cause the debugger to break immediately if an exception is thrown in a .NET method or other system code. Instead, execution continues until the debugger hits non-system code, then it breaks. As a result, you do not have to step through the system code when an exception occurs.

Just My Code gives you another option that can be even more useful: Break when an exception is: User-unhandled. If you choose this setting for an exception, the debugger will break execution in user code, but only if the exception is not caught and handled by the user code. This setting negates the effect of the top-level ASP.NET exception handler, because that handler is in non-user code.

To enable debugging of ASP.NET exceptions with Just My Code

  1. On the Debug menu, click Exceptions.

    The Exceptions dialog box appears.

  2. On the Common Language Runtime Exceptions row, select Thrown or User-unhandled.

    To use the User-unhandled setting, Just My Code must be enabled..

To use best practices for ASP.NET exception handling

  • Place try ... catch blocks around code that can throw exceptions that you can anticipate and know how to handle. For example, if the application is making calls to an XML Web Service or directly to a SQL Server, that code should be in try ... catch blocks because there are numerous exceptions that can occur.

See also