-Spencer
------
"What a lark! What a plunge!"
-Virginia Woolf, Mrs. Dalloway
On Thursday, November 20, 2014 4:56 AM, Derick Rethans <derick[@]xdebug.org> wrote:
Please, no top-replies on this list.
On Wed, 19 Nov 2014, Spencer Williams IV wrote:
> Thank you very much for the response! I totally made some progress!
>
> I had a feeling it was supposed to show me the actual file path on the
> system after file://. In the Path Mapping tab, I had a path to
> https://example.com/misc in the "Path on server" column,
I would think you need to leave out the "https://example.com" part, and
just use "/misc" in your path mappings.
cheers,
Derick
My apologies for top-replying. And I also apologize if the Yahoo mail client inadvertently adds anything unnecessary, and for accidentally sending this message to you rather than the mailing list :-)
So, I tried entering just the actual path part for the Path on Server
column like you suggested, but it once again ignored the breakpoints.
Strangely, it won't honor them unless I don't tell it about any paths.
Also, would you happen to know how I can tell it about files in the web
application that don't have a path on the server? Like stuff in /bin or
/admin folders and whatnot that are for the framework and aren't meant
to be accessed directly via a web server path? It's not breaking on any
of these files... Sorry to keep asking Eclipse questions :-)
Received on Thu Nov 20 2014 - 20:59:02 GMT
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