Dr. Watson (debugger)
Dr. Watson is an application debugger included with the Microsoft Windows operating system. It may be named drwatson.exe
, drwtsn32.exe
or dwwin.exe
, depending on the version of Windows. It is named after Doctor Watson of Sherlock Holmes fame, the idea being that it would collect error information (symptoms) following a program crash. The use of the word "Watson" has since been expanded to include general end-user feedback services.[1] The original name of this diagnostic tool was "Sherlock".[2]
The information obtained and logged by Dr. Watson is the information needed by technical support personnel to diagnose a program error for a computer running Windows. A text file (usually drwtsn32.log
) is created whenever an error is detected, and can be delivered to support personnel by the method they prefer. A crash dump file can also be created, which is a binary file that a programmer can load into a debugger. Dr. Watson can be made to generate more exacting information for debugging purposes if the appropriate symbol files are installed and the symbol search path (environment variable) is set.
When a program error occurs in Windows, the system searches for a program error handler. A program error handler deals with errors as they arise during the running of a program. If the system does not find a program error handler, the system verifies that the program is not currently being debugged and considers the error to be unhandled. The system then processes unhandled errors by looking in the registry for a program error debugger for which Dr. Watson is the default. A third-party debugger can also be used in place of Dr. Watson. The Watcom C Compiler includes a similar crash-analysis tool named "Dr. Watcom".[3]
Beginning with Windows XP, Dr. Watson (drwtsn32.exe) was extended with (dwwin.exe) "Problem Reports and Solutions".[4] On some versions of Windows the older version (drwatson.exe) may be available by typing "drwatson.exe" into the command prompt box or in the 'Search programs and files' box in the Start menu in Windows 7.
See also
References
- ↑ Chen, Raymond (10 August 2005). "Why is Windows Error Reporting Nicknamed "Dr. Watson"?". Retrieved 21 May 2006.
- ↑ Chen, Raymond (14 November 2005). "What was Dr. Watson's Original Name?". Retrieved 21 May 2006.
- ↑ Grehan, Rick (October 1994). "Watcom C/C++ Gets a New Face". BYTE.
- ↑ "Error Reporting Policies and Advanced Features". Microsoft. Retrieved 28 September 2011.
External links
- Kirk Glerum and Mike Hollinshead - Watson (what happens when your system crashes?)
- How to disable Dr. Watson for Windows