Im trying to configure xdebug to work with Netbeans 6.9 and php 5.3
As far as i concern i have setup xdebug properly.
I can see xdebug extension from phpinfo page.
I solved this using a windows -> remote LAMP server config after reading the following post, leaving the link in case anyone finds it handy:
http://stuporglue.org/setting-up-xdebug-with-netbeans-on-windows-with-a-remote-apache-server/comment-page-1/#comment-6227
For me it was changing
;xdebug.remote_enable = 0 (default value in clean XAMPP installation)
to
xdebug.remote_enable = 1
did the trick
Adding an index.php did the trick for me.
An alternative is the Dephpugger project. Is like ipdb in python or byebug in Ruby. https://github.com/tacnoman/dephpugger
Is very easy to use.
Having just upgraded to the new Ubuntu 14.4 my NetBeans Xdebug stopped working. I've followed all the answers above to date to no avail.
I found a NetBeans Ubuntu statement that the /etc/php5/cli/conf.d/xdebug.ini file should have xdebug.remote_enable=on. When I checked the /etc/php5/cli/conf.d directory, I found no xdebug.ini file. However there was a link to /etc/php5/mods-available/xdebug.ini there. Subsequent adding the xdebug.remote_enable=on to that file fixed the problem.
PS - This works on NetBeans 8.0.1
First, check that it isn't actually working for you, and you don't notice. I've done this...convinced it's not working I wasted a chunk of time trying to get it to work, only to find that everything was OK.
Look at your NetBeans status bar. If you see "netbeans-xdebug" and "running" then it is actually working just fine. You probably have the "Stop at first line" option turned off and you didn't hit any breakpoints you set (if any) yet. That would be a reason you are seeing the page with little or no indication that the debugger is actually connected.
If you instead see "Waiting for Connection (netbeans-xdebug)" and the progress bar is cycling, then you are indeed not connected. Open Tools|Options, and go to the PHP page. On the general tab, make sure that the "Debugger port" is 9000 and the "Session ID" is "netbeans-xdebug". You may want to have "Stop at First Line" checked. I don't, as I find it a bit annoying. I would definitely ensure that "Watches and Balloon Evaluation" is not checked. This option causes NetBeans and the debugger to destabilize. If you need a watch, hack a local variable into the PHP code where you need it, and you'll see it on the "Variables" tab when the debugger is running. Also, confirm that file (index.php) is specified in the project's Run Configuration > Index File.
Since you see xdebug in phpinfo()
, that end of it is fine. Just make sure that all of the values look reasonable, and that there is some reference to a cookie "XDEBUG_SESSION=netbeans-xdebug" somewhere on that page. (Make sure that you don't have cookies turned off on the browser!)
The only other thing to check is to see if some firewall/security program is running that would be blocking TCP/UDP locally (which would be super-odd, but not out of the realm of possibility), or that port 9000 isn't already used by another application. I am using a different port number in my local setup for some reason. I don't remember changing it, but I am sure that the only reason I would have is if I had hit a port conflict with something else.
One last thing... We've been assuming that you are running NetBeans and the web server on the same computer. That's a common configuration, but not the only one. If your web server is on a different computer, then change the localhost in xdebug.remote_host=localhost
to the IP address of the computer on which NetBeans is running.
Another last thing: When cycling through frustrating iterations, until you see xdebug info in phpinfo(), restart apache/php. Once there, still restart NetBeans between iterations. And believe it or not, restart your browser.