Navigate stacktraces within Atom!
Given a stacktrace from a supported language, this package gives you:
- A mile-high view of the full trace, with a few lines of context on each stack frame;
- Highlighting and navigation tools to walk up and down the stack while you're looking at the full files.
- [planned] Intelligent mappings from paths from other systems to yours. If it looks like
a ruby gem path, it'll map into your
${GEM_HOME}
; if it looks like a virtualenv path, it'll map into your virtualenv.
apm install stacktrace
Stacktrace is a Bring Your Own Keybinding ™️ package. Rather than try to guess a set of bindings that won't collide with any other package, or that aren't six-key chords, I'm not providing any default keybindings.
To set hotkeys for stacktrace commands, invoke Application: Open Your Keymap
from the command palette, and add a section like this one:
'.workspace':
'alt-s enter': 'stacktrace:from-selection'
'alt-s p': 'stacktrace:paste'
'alt-s up': 'stacktrace:to-caller'
'alt-s down': 'stacktrace:follow-call'
Stacktraces are currently recognized in the following languages:
- Ruby
- (Java|Coffee)script
In the true spirit of README-driven development, these are the features that I'd like to see in place before I mark it 1.0.
- Accept stacktraces pasted into a dialog you call up from the command palette.
- Present a view that gives you bits of context around each frame of a specific stack.
- Pluggable stacktrace recognition and parsing code.
- Map parsed frames to source files on the local filesystem.
- While a stacktrace is active, highlight individual lines from the trace in open editors.
- Provide commands for next-frame, previous-frame, and turning it off.
- Show a stacktrace navigation view as a bottom panel with next, previous and stop buttons.