Intel® Fortran Compiler Classic and Intel® Fortran Compiler Developer Guide and Reference

ID 767251
Date 11/07/2023
Public

A newer version of this document is available. Customers should click here to go to the newest version.

Document Table of Contents

Use Remote Debugging

The following applies to Microsoft* Visual Studio* 2013 and 2015.

Remote debugging lets you use your local (host) system to debug an application running on a remote system.

Remote Debugging using Microsoft* Visual Studio*

There are two remote connection types available: DCOM ("Remote with Windows authentication") and TCP/IP ("Remote with no authentication"). For more information on initial setup for remote debugging, refer to the Microsoft* Visual Studio* remote debugging setup topics in the Microsoft* MSDN documentation.

Remote debugging typically requires use of the debugging monitor (msvsmon.exe). Run the monitor in the correct mode for the remote system's architecture. To do this, on the remote system, select the program group Microsoft Visual Studio 2013 (or applicable version year), then choose Visual Studio Tools and select the correct Remote Debugger Folder.

Remote debugging also requires proper set up of the IDE Debugging property page on the host machine.

To set up remote debugging using the IDE property pages:

  1. On the host machine, choose Project > Properties > Configuration Properties > Debugging. Your screen should resemble this image:

  2. Specify the following:

    Connection: Use the drop-down box to select the type of connection.

    Remote Server Name: Use the drop-down box to select the name of the remote system.

    Remote Command: Type the command you want to issue on the remote machine. Typically, this is a pathname to an executable file (.exe) on the remote machine; for example: d:\remote\myapp.exe

  3. Optionally, set Attach to Yes to attach to an application that is already running on the remote machine.

To start remote debugging:

  1. Make sure you have the necessary remote debugging permissions on the remote machine. For example, you need Administrator privileges if you want to debug a process running on a remote machine under another account name.

  2. Run the Remote Debugging Monitor on the remote machine.

  3. Launch Microsoft* Visual Studio* on the host machine and use it to attach to a program you want to debug on the remote machine, or launch a program you want to debug on the remote machine.