| name | dotnet-debugging |
| description | Debugs Windows and Linux/macOS applications (native, .NET/CLR, mixed-mode) with WinDbg MCP (crash dumps, !analyze, !syncblk, !dlk, !runaway, !dumpheap, !gcroot, BSOD), dotnet-dump, lldb with SOS, createdump, and container diagnostics (Docker, Kubernetes). Hang/deadlock diagnosis, high CPU triage, memory leak investigation, kernel debugging, and dotnet-monitor for production. Spans 17 topic areas. Do not use for routine .NET SDK profiling, benchmark design, or CI test debugging. |
| license | MIT |
| user-invocable | false |
dotnet-debugging
Overview
Windows and Linux/macOS debugging using WinDbg MCP tools (Windows), dotnet-dump, and lldb with SOS (Linux/macOS). Applicable to any application -- native, managed (.NET/CLR), or mixed-mode. Includes container diagnostic patterns for Docker and Kubernetes. Guides investigation of crash dumps, application hangs, high CPU, and memory pressure through structured command packs and report templates.
Platforms: Windows (WinDbg MCP, cdb), Linux/macOS (dotnet-dump, lldb with SOS, createdump, dotnet-monitor).
Routing Table
| Topic | Keywords | Description | Companion File |
|---|
| MCP setup | MCP server, WinDbg, configuration | MCP server configuration | references/mcp-setup.md |
| MCP access | MCP access, tool IDs, dispatch | MCP access patterns | references/access-mcp.md |
| Common patterns | debug patterns, SOS, CLR | Common debugging patterns | references/common-patterns.md |
| Dump workflow | dump file, .dmp, crash dump | Dump file analysis workflow | references/dump-workflow.md |
| Live attach | live process, cdb, attach | Live process attach guide | references/live-attach.md |
| Symbols | symbol server, .symfix, PDB | Symbol configuration | references/symbols.md |
| Sanity check | verify, environment, baseline | Sanity check procedures | references/sanity-check.md |
| Scenario packs | command pack, triage, workflow | Scenario command packs | references/scenario-command-packs.md |
| Capture playbooks | capture, procdump, triggers | Capture playbooks | references/capture-playbooks.md |
| Report template | diagnostic report, evidence | Diagnostic report template | references/report-template.md |
| Crash triage | crash, exception, access violation | Crash triage | references/task-crash.md |
| Hang triage | hang, deadlock, freeze | Hang triage | references/task-hang.md |
| High-CPU triage | high CPU, runaway thread, spin | High-CPU triage | references/task-high-cpu.md |
| Memory triage | memory leak, heap, LOH | Memory leak triage | references/task-memory.md |
| Kernel debugging | kernel, BSOD, bugcheck | Kernel debugging | references/task-kernel.md |
| Unknown triage | unknown issue, general triage | Unknown issue triage | references/task-unknown.md |
| Linux debugging | dotnet-dump, lldb, createdump, container | Linux/macOS debugging, dotnet-dump, lldb SOS, containers | references/linux-debugging.md |
Scope
- Crash dump analysis (.dmp files) on Windows, Linux, and macOS
- Live process attach (cdb on Windows, lldb on Linux/macOS)
- Hang and deadlock diagnosis (thread analysis, lock detection, wait chains)
- High CPU triage (runaway thread identification)
- Memory pressure and leak investigation (managed heap, native heap)
- Kernel dump triage (BSOD / bugcheck analysis, Windows)
- Container diagnostics (dotnet-dump in Docker/Kubernetes, sidecar patterns)
- Production diagnostics (dotnet-monitor REST API, trigger-based collection)
- SOS commands across all platforms (WinDbg, dotnet-dump, lldb)
- Structured diagnostic reports with stack evidence
Boundary with [skill:dotnet-tooling]
Both skills use overlapping tools (dotnet-dump, dotnet-counters, dotnet-trace) but for different purposes:
| Scenario | Use this skill (debugging) | Use [skill:dotnet-tooling] |
|---|
| Investigating a crash dump (.dmp) | Yes | No |
| "Why did my app crash/hang/OOM?" | Yes | No |
| Attaching a debugger to a live process | Yes | No |
| "How do I profile my app's performance?" | No | Yes (profiling) |
| "How do I reduce GC pressure?" | No | Yes (gc-memory) |
| Collecting a dump for later analysis | Yes | No |
| Running dotnet-counters to monitor metrics | No | Yes (profiling) |
| Analyzing a dump with dotnet-dump | Yes | No |
| Decompiling an assembly to understand behavior | No | Yes (ilspy-decompile) |
Rule of thumb: if something is broken (crash, hang, deadlock, OOM), route here. If something is slow or needs optimization, route to [skill:dotnet-tooling].
Out of scope
- Performance profiling (dotnet-counters, dotnet-trace for optimization) -> [skill:dotnet-tooling]
- GC tuning and managed memory optimization -> [skill:dotnet-tooling]
- Assembly decompilation (ILSpy) -> [skill:dotnet-tooling]
- Performance benchmarking and regression detection -> [skill:dotnet-testing]
- Application-level logging and observability -> [skill:dotnet-devops]
- Unit/integration test debugging -> [skill:dotnet-testing]
MCP Tool Contract
These tool IDs are the WinDbg MCP server's exported names (single-underscore mcp_...), not the mcp__... dispatch prefix used by some hosts.
| Operation | Purpose |
|---|
mcp_mcp-windbg_open_windbg_remote | Attach to a live debug server |
mcp_mcp-windbg_open_windbg_dump | Open a saved dump file |
mcp_mcp-windbg_run_windbg_cmd | Execute debugger commands |
mcp_mcp-windbg_close_windbg_remote | Detach from live session |
mcp_mcp-windbg_close_windbg_dump | Close dump session |
Diagnostic Workflow
Preflight: Symbols
Before any analysis, configure symbols to get meaningful stacks:
- Set Microsoft symbol server:
.symfix (sets srv* to Microsoft public symbols)
- Add application symbols:
.sympath+ C:\path\to\your\pdbs
- Reload modules:
.reload /f
- Verify:
lm (list modules -- check for "deferred" vs "loaded" status)
Without correct symbols, stacks show raw addresses instead of function names.
Crash Dump Analysis
- Open dump:
mcp_mcp-windbg_open_windbg_dump with dump file path
- Load SOS for managed code:
.loadby sos clr (Framework) or .loadby sos coreclr (.NET Core)
- Get exception context:
!pe (print exception), !analyze -v (automatic analysis)
- Inspect threads:
~*e !clrstack (all managed stacks), !threads (thread list)
- Check managed heap:
!dumpheap -stat (heap summary), !gcroot <addr> (object roots)
Hang / Deadlock Diagnosis
- Attach or open dump, load SOS
- List all threads:
!threads, identify waiting threads with !syncblk (sync block table)
- Detect deadlocks:
!dlk (SOS deadlock detection)
- Inspect thread stacks:
~Ns !clrstack for specific thread N
- Check wait reasons:
!waitchain for COM/RPC chains, !mda for MDA diagnostics
High CPU Triage
- Attach to live process or collect multiple dumps 10-30 seconds apart
- Use
!runaway to identify threads consuming the most CPU time
- Inspect hot thread stacks:
~Ns kb (native stack), ~Ns !clrstack (managed stack)
- Look for tight loops, blocked finalizer threads, or excessive GC
Memory Pressure Investigation
- Open dump, load SOS
- Managed heap:
!dumpheap -stat (type statistics), !dumpheap -type <TypeName> (filter)
- Find leaked objects:
!gcroot <address> (trace GC roots to pinned or static references)
- Native heap:
!heap -s (heap summary), !heap -l (leak detection)
- LOH fragmentation:
!eeheap -gc (GC heap segments)
Report Template
## Diagnostic Report
**Symptom:** [crash/hang/high-cpu/memory-leak]
**Process:** [name, PID, bitness]
**Dump type:** [full/mini/live-attach]
### Evidence
- Exception: [type and message, or N/A]
- Faulting thread: [ID, managed/native, stack summary]
- Key stacks: [condensed callstack with module!function]
### Root Cause
[Concise analysis backed by stack/heap evidence]
### Recommendations
[Numbered action items]
Guardrails
- Do not claim certainty without callee-side evidence
- Do not call it a deadlock unless lock/wait evidence supports it
- Preserve user privacy: do not include secrets from environment blocks in reports
Cross-references: [skill:dotnet-tooling] for .NET SDK diagnostic tools (references/profiling.md) and GC/memory tuning (references/gc-memory.md).
References