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gh-zerobearing2-rails-ai/skills/debugging/SKILL.md
2025-11-30 09:08:30 +08:00

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name, description
name description
rails-ai:debugging-rails Use when debugging Rails issues - provides Rails-specific debugging tools (logs, console, byebug, SQL logging) integrated with systematic debugging process

Rails Debugging Tools & Techniques

**REQUIRED BACKGROUND:** Use superpowers:systematic-debugging for investigation process - That skill defines 4-phase framework (Root Cause → Pattern → Hypothesis → Implementation) - This skill provides Rails-specific debugging tools for each phase - Rails application behaving unexpectedly - Tests failing with unclear errors - Performance issues or N+1 queries - Production errors need investigation Before completing debugging work: - Root cause identified (not just symptoms) - Regression test added (prevents recurrence) - Fix verified in development and test environments - All tests passing (bin/ci passes) - Logs reviewed for related issues - Performance impact verified (if applicable) Check Rails logs for errors and request traces
# Development logs
tail -f log/development.log

# Production logs (Kamal)
kamal app logs --tail

# Filter by severity
grep ERROR log/production.log

# Filter by request
grep "Started GET" log/development.log

Interactive Rails console for testing models/queries
# Start console
rails console

# Or production console (Kamal)
kamal app exec 'bin/rails console'

# Test models
user = User.find(1)
user.valid?  # Check validations
user.errors.full_messages  # See errors

# Test queries
User.where(email: "test@example.com").to_sql  # See SQL
User.includes(:posts).where(posts: { published: true })  # Avoid N+1

Breakpoint debugger for stepping through code
# Add to any Rails file
def some_method
  byebug  # Execution stops here
  # ... rest of method
end

# Byebug commands:
# n  - next line
# s  - step into method
# c  - continue execution
# pp variable  - pretty print
# var local  - show local variables
# exit  - quit debugger

Enable verbose SQL logging to see queries
# In rails console or code
ActiveRecord::Base.logger = Logger.new(STDOUT)

# Now all SQL queries print to console
User.all
# => SELECT "users".* FROM "users"

Check route definitions and paths
# List all routes
rails routes

# Filter routes
rails routes | grep users

# Show routes for controller
rails routes -c users

Check migration status and schema
# Migration status
rails db:migrate:status

# Show schema version
rails db:version

# Check pending migrations
rails db:abort_if_pending_migrations

Run Ruby code in Rails environment
# Run one-liner
rails runner "puts User.count"

# Run script
rails runner scripts/investigate_users.rb

# Production environment
RAILS_ENV=production rails runner "User.pluck(:email)"

Run tests with detailed output
# Run single test with backtrace
rails test test/models/user_test.rb --verbose

# Run with warnings enabled
RUBYOPT=-W rails test

# Run with seed for reproducibility
rails test --seed 12345

Check logs for many similar queries:

User Load (0.1ms)  SELECT * FROM users WHERE id = 1
Post Load (0.1ms)  SELECT * FROM posts WHERE user_id = 1
Post Load (0.1ms)  SELECT * FROM posts WHERE user_id = 2
Post Load (0.1ms)  SELECT * FROM posts WHERE user_id = 3

Use includes/preload:
# Bad
users.each { |user| user.posts.count }

# Good
users.includes(:posts).each { |user| user.posts.count }

Error: "ActiveRecord::StatementInvalid: no such column"
# Check migration status
rails db:migrate:status

# Run pending migrations
rails db:migrate

# Or rollback and retry
rails db:rollback
rails db:migrate

- superpowers:systematic-debugging (4-phase framework) - rails-ai:models (Query optimization, N+1 debugging) - rails-ai:controllers (Request debugging, parameter inspection) - rails-ai:testing (Test debugging, failure investigation)

Official Documentation:

Gems & Libraries:

Tools: