Hi Pete,

don't remember for sure and don't have VS offhand to experiment but basically I've made a new project and in the debug properties window (that might be common for most VS versions, mine is VS2003) entered the full-path to java.exe and also supplied it with arguments (next textfield). And yes, you need debug or fastdebug jdk bits to get native stack trace.
I've never tried to get the Java stack in VS.

Hope it helps,
 Andrei


Pete Brunet wrote:
In case it's useful info, so far I tried the second option "To import an
executable into a Visual Studio solution" here:
  http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/0bxe8ytt.aspx
but it crashes.

Pete
===
Lussier, Denis wrote:
I am very interested in this and NO I haven't figured it out yet.   I
presently build a publically available OpenJDK 6 Win32 installer.  I'd
love to be able to do a little basic debugging/investigation of a few
issues I see when running Eclipse.

--Denis Lussier
  http://openscg.org

On 6/16/10, Pete Brunet <p...@a11ysoft.com> wrote:
I'd like to use the Visual Studio debugger (VS 2010 Pro in my case) to
set breakpoints and step through the OpenJDK source.  Has anyone
documented how to set up an OpenJDK Visual Studio project?  I'd like VS
to be aware of all the OpenJDK source and the built PDBs.  Also, through
the VS GUI I can attach VS to the running java process, but it might be
better to activate java.exe from VS.  Please let me know if you've
already determined how to do any of this.

Thank you, Pete
--
*Pete Brunet*

a11ysoft - Accessibility Architecture and Development
(512) 238-6967 (work), (512) 689-4155 (cell)
Skype: pete.brunet
IM: ptbrunet (AOL, Google), ptbru...@live.com (MSN)
http://www.a11ysoft.com/about/
Ionosphere: WS4G



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