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# Debugger.Source
A `Debugger.Source` instance represents either a piece of JavaScript source
code or the serialized text of a block of WebAssembly code. The two cases are
distinguished by the latter having its `introductionType` property always
being `"wasm"` and the former having its `introductionType` property never
being `"wasm"`.
Each [`Debugger`][debugger-object] instance has a separate collection of
`Debugger.Source` instances representing the source code that has been
presented to the system.
A debugger may place its own properties on `Debugger.Source` instances,
to store metadata about particular pieces of source code.
## Debugger.Source for JavaScript
For a `Debugger.Source` instance representing a piece of JavaScript source
code, its properties provide the source code itself as a string, and describe
where it came from. Each [`Debugger.Script`][script] instance refers to the
`Debugger.Source` instance holding the source code from which it was produced.
If a single piece of source code contains both top-level code and
function definitions, perhaps with nested functions, then the
[`Debugger.Script`][script] instances for those all refer to the same
`Debugger.Source` instance. Each script indicates the substring of the
overall source to which it corresponds.
A `Debugger.Source` instance may represent only a portion of a larger
source document. For example, an HTML document can contain JavaScript in
multiple `<script>` elements and event handler content attributes.
In this case, there may be either a single `Debugger.Source` instance
for the entire HTML document, with each [`Debugger.Script`][script] referring to
its substring of the document; or there may be a separate
`Debugger.Source` instance for each `<script>` element and
attribute. The choice is left up to the implementation.
If a given piece of source code is presented to the JavaScript
implementation more than once, with the same origin metadata, the
JavaScript implementation may generate a fresh `Debugger.Source`
instance to represent each presentation, or it may use a single
`Debugger.Source` instance to represent them all.
## Debugger.Source for WebAssembly
For a `Debugger.Source` instance representing the serialized text of a block
of WebAssembly code, its properties provide the serialized text as a string.
Currently only entire modules evaluated via `new WebAssembly.Module` are
represented. SpiderMonkey constructs exactly one `Debugger.Source` for each
underlying WebAssembly module per [`Debugger`][debugger-object] instance.
Please note at the time of this writing, support for WebAssembly is very
preliminary. Many properties below return placeholder values.
## Convention
For descriptions of properties and methods below, if the behavior of the
property or method differs between the instance referring to JavaScript source
or to a block of WebAssembly code, the text will be split into two sections,
headed by "**if the instance refers to JavaScript source**" and "**if the
instance refers to WebAssembly code**", respectively. If the behavior does not
differ, no such emphasized headings will appear.
## Accessor Properties of the Debugger.Source Prototype Object
A `Debugger.Source` instance inherits the following accessor properties
from its prototype:
### `text`
**If the instance refers to JavaScript source**, the JavaScript source
code, as a string. The value satisfies the `Program`,
`FunctionDeclaration`, or `FunctionExpression` productions in the
ECMAScript standard.
**If the instance refers to WebAssembly code**, the `"[wasm]"` value will
be returned.
### `binary`
**If the instance refers to WebAssembly code**, a Uint8Array that contains
the WebAssembly bytecode.
### `url`
**If the instance refers to JavaScript source**, the filename or URL from
which this script's code was loaded. For scripts created by `eval` or the
`Function` constructor, this may be a synthesized filename, starting with a
valid URL and followed by information tracking how the code was introduced
into the system; the entire string is not a valid URL. For
`Function.prototype`'s script, this is `null`. Source may be loaded from a
URL in the following ways:
* The URL may appear as the `src` attribute of a `<script>` element
in markup text.
* The URL may be passed to the `Worker` web worker constructor, or the web
worker `importScripts` function.
* The URL may be the name of a XPCOM JavaScript module or subscript.
(Note that code passed to `eval`, the `Function` constructor, or a
similar function is <i>not</i> considered to be loaded from a URL; the
`url` accessor on `Debugger.Source` instances for such sources should
return `undefined`.)
**If the instance refers to WebAssembly code**, the URL of the script that
called `new WebAssembly.Module` with the string `"> wasm"` appended.
### `startLine`
**If the instance refers to JavaScript source**, the 1-origin start line of the
source within the file or URL it was loaded from. This is normally `1`, but
may have another value if the source is part of an HTML document.
### `startColumn`
**If the instance refers to JavaScript source**, the 1-origin start column in
UTF-16 code units of the source within the file or URL it was loaded from. This
is normally `1`, but may have another value if the source is part of an HTML
document.
### `id`
**If the instance refers to JavaScript source**, an int32 counter that identifies
the source within the current process. This ID is used in other places in Gecko
that weakly refer to sources, such as nsIScriptError.
### `sourceMapURL`
**If the instance refers to JavaScript source**, if this source was
produced by a minimizer or translated from some other language, and we
know the URL of a <b>source map</b> document relating the source positions
in this source to the corresponding source positions in the original
source, then this property's value is that URL. Otherwise, this is `null`.
(On the web, the translator may provide the source map URL in a
specially formatted comment in the JavaScript source code, or via a
header in the HTTP reply that carried the generated JavaScript.)
This property is writable, so you can change the source map URL by
setting it. All Debugger.Source objects referencing the same
source will see the change. Setting an empty string has no effect
and will not change existing value.
**If the instance refers to WebAssembly code**, `null`. Attempts to write
to this property throw a `TypeError`.
### `displayURL`
If the script had a special `//# sourceURL` comment, as described in
the source maps specification, then this property's value holds
the string that was given. Otherwise, this is `null`.
### `element`
The [`Debugger.Object`][object] instance referring to the DOM element to which
this source code belongs, if any, or `undefined` if it belongs to no DOM
element. Source belongs to a DOM element in the following cases:
* Source belongs to a `<script>` element if it is the element's text
content (that is, it is written out as the body of the `<script>`
element in the markup text), or is the source document referenced by its
`src` attribute.
* Source belongs to a DOM element if it is an event handler content
attribute (that is, if it is written out in the markup text as an
attribute value).
* Source belongs to a DOM element if it was assigned to one of the
element's event handler IDL attributes as a string. (Note that one may
assign both strings and functions to DOM elements' event handler IDL
attributes. If one assigns a function, that function's script's source
does <i>not</i> belong to the DOM element; the function's definition
must appear elsewhere.)
(If the sources attached to a DOM element change, the `Debugger.Source`
instances representing superseded code still refer to the DOM element;
this accessor only reflects origins, not current relationships.)
### `elementAttributeName`
If this source belongs to a DOM element because it is an event handler
content attribute or an event handler IDL attribute, this is the name of
that attribute, a string. Otherwise, this is `undefined`.
### `introductionType`
**If the instance refers to JavaScript source**, a string indicating how
this source code was introduced into the system. This accessor returns
one of the following values:
* `"eval"`, for code passed to `eval`.
* `"debugger eval"`, for code evaluated by debugger.
* `"Function"`, for code passed to the `Function` constructor.
* `"GeneratorFunction"`, for code passed to the generator constructor.
* `"AsyncFunction"`, for code passed to the async function constructor.
* `"AsyncGenerator"`, for code passed to the async generator constructor.
* `"Worklet"`, for code loaded by worklet.
* `"importScripts"`, for code by calling `importScripts` in a web worker.
* `"eventHandler"`, for code assigned to DOM elements' event handler IDL
attributes as a string.
* `"srcScript"`, for code belonging to `<script src="file.js">` elements.
* `"inlineScript"`, for code belonging to `<script>code;</script>` elements.
* `"injectedScript"`, for code belonging to scripts that _would_ be
`"inlineScript"` except that they were not part of the initial file itself.
For example, scripts created via:
* `document.write("<script>code;</script>")`
* `var s = document.createElement("script"); s.text = "code";`
* `"importedModule"`, for code that was loaded indirectly by being imported
by another script using ESM static or dynamic imports.
* `"javascriptURL"`, for code presented in `javascript:` URLs.
* `"domTimer"`, for code passed to `setTimeout`/`setInterval` as a string.
* `"self-hosted"`, for internal self-hosted JS code.
* `undefined`, if the implementation doesn't know how the code was
introduced.
**If the instance refers to WebAssembly code**, `"wasm"`.
### `introductionScript` & `introductionOffset`
**If the instance refers to JavaScript source**, and if this source was
introduced by calling a function from debuggee code, then
`introductionScript` is the [`Debugger.Script`][script] instance referring
to the script containing that call, and `introductionOffset` is the call's
bytecode offset within that script. Otherwise, these are both `undefined`.
Taken together, these properties indicate the location of the introducing
call.
For the purposes of these accessors, assignments to accessor properties are
treated as function calls. Thus, setting a DOM element's event handler IDL
attribute by assigning to the corresponding JavaScript property creates a
source whose `introductionScript` and `introductionOffset` refer to the
property assignment.
Since a `<script>` element parsed from a web page's original HTML was not
introduced by any scripted call, its source's `introductionScript` and
`introductionOffset` accessors both return `undefined`.
If a `<script>` element was dynamically inserted into a document, then these
accessors refer to the call that actually caused the script to run—usually
the call that made the element part of the document. Thus, they do
<i>not</i> refer to the call that created the element; stored the source as
the element's text child; made the element a child of some uninserted parent
node that was later inserted; or the like.
Although the main script of a worker thread is introduced by a call to
`Worker` or `SharedWorker`, these accessors always return `undefined` on
such script's sources. A worker's main script source and the call that
created the worker are always in separate threads, but
[`Debugger`][debugger-object] is an inherently single-threaded facility: its
debuggees must all run in the same thread. Since the global that created the
worker is in a different thread, it is guaranteed not to be a debuggee of
the [`Debugger`][debugger-object] instance that owns this source; and thus
the creating call is never "in debuggee code". Relating a worker to its
creator, and other multi-threaded debugging concerns, are out of scope for
[`Debugger`][debugger-object].
**If the instance refers to WebAssembly code**, `introductionScript` is
the [`Debugger.Script`][script] instance referring to the same underlying
WebAssembly module. `introductionOffset` is `undefined`.
## Function Properties of the Debugger.Source Prototype Object
The functions described below may only be called with a `this` value
referring to a `Debugger.Source` instance; they may not be used as
methods of other kinds of objects.
### `reparse()`
**If the instance refers to JavaScript source**, and if the source has text
available, return a `Debugger.Script` instance referring to a new script
created by reparsing this source's text. Debugger `onNewScript` hooks will
not be invoked for the new script. Otherwise, throw an `Error`.
[debugger-object]: Debugger.md
[script]: Debugger.Script.md
[object]: Debugger.Object.md