# Copyright (c) Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved. # Licensed under the MIT License. See LICENSE in the project root # for license information. import sys if __name__ == "__main__": # debugpy can also be invoked directly rather than via -m. In this case, the first # entry on sys.path is the one added automatically by Python for the directory # containing this file. This means that import debugpy will not work, since we need # the parent directory of debugpy/ to be in sys.path, rather than debugpy/ itself. # # The other issue is that many other absolute imports will break, because they # will be resolved relative to debugpy/ - e.g. `import debugger` will then try # to import debugpy/debugger.py. # # To fix both, we need to replace the automatically added entry such that it points # at parent directory of debugpy/ instead of debugpy/ itself, import debugpy with that # in sys.path, and then remove the first entry entry altogether, so that it doesn't # affect any further imports we might do. For example, suppose the user did: # # python /foo/bar/debugpy ... # # At the beginning of this script, sys.path will contain "/foo/bar/debugpy" as the # first entry. What we want is to replace it with "/foo/bar', then import debugpy # with that in effect, and then remove the replaced entry before any more # code runs. The imported debugpy module will remain in sys.modules, and thus all # future imports of it or its submodules will resolve accordingly. if "debugpy" not in sys.modules: # Do not use dirname() to walk up - this can be a relative path, e.g. ".". sys.path[0] = sys.path[0] + "/../" import debugpy # noqa del sys.path[0] from debugpy.server import cli cli.main()