When working with Unity you've probably asked that question when a transform position/rotation/scale is changing and you have no idea why.
Generally you'd set a breakpoint and debug it this way but for transform you cannot easily do that. The best way seem to be replacing all calls that modify it directly, eg
transform.postion = newPosition
to some interceptor code that you can control, like
Interceptor.SetPosition(transfrom, newPosition)
Unfortunately this is not always possible or easy.
There's now a simpler to use tool that'll allow you to add events to Unity dlls. With that it's possible to write event driven code, eg
transform.SetPositionExecuting += (sender, e) => <your handler code>
https://github.com/handzlikchris/Unity.MissingUnityEvents
This tool will help you do exactly that but automatically and without modifying any of your source code.
I've went further with this concept and created a tool that focuses on tracking ANY changes made to ANY transforms which is then neatly laid out in friendly GUI. Check it out at: https://immersiveVRTools.com/projects/transform-changes-debugger
The tool will use IL Weaving and will redirect all the set calls to transform.position
, transform.rotation
and transform.scale
to TransformSetterCallInterceptor
where you could add any actions needed.
eg. Method signature and default implementation:
public static void InterceptSetPosition(Transform originalTransform, Vector3 setTo, Object callingObject, string callingMethodName)
{
//do whatever you want to do
originalTransform.position = setTo;
}
Method will give you access to
- original transform
- value that it'd be set to
- object that does that
- and calling method name
You can clone this repository and run it in Unity as an example.
To import into your project:
- In Unity add a package dependency to Malimbe which will hook up to Unity build process so the weaver code can work on your assemblies after Unity is done compiling them.
You can do that via manifest.json
file located in /Packages
folder. You'll have to add following entries (as per Malimbe page)
"scopedRegistries": [
{
"name": "npmjs",
"url": "https://registry.npmjs.org/",
"scopes": [
"io.extendreality"
]
}
],
"dependencies": {
"io.extendreality.malimbe": "9.6.5",
...
}
}
- Download and import TransformSetterInterceptor
- Recompile
- If you see an error
'A configuration lists 'TransformSetterCallRedirector' but the assembly file wasn't found in the search paths'
That meansTransformSetterCallRedirector.Fody
is not compiled, you can go toModuleWeaver.cs
and make some non-relevant change (like adding a space) followed by saving to make sure DLL is actually compiled
- Now changes to your scripts will trigger recompile which will in turn trigger IL Weaving to intercept your calls
There's a simple script TransformSetterInterceptorFilter
that'll allow you to further narrow down to exact transform that you're interested in via simple drag and drop. From there it'll be very easy to trace what's happening via logging, stack-trace or whatever custom approach you adopt.
At build time calls to transform setters will be intercepted and directed to static interceptor class, that should not have significant impact on performance as it's simply adding static method call.
For fallback weaving IL instructions are added at every place that is redirected and Debug.Log will be called for all of them, this call actually gets StackTrace which is rather quite costly. You can stop fallback weaving by removing FallbackSampleNameFormat
from configuration.
At later stage I'll look into weaving additional 'if' statements so it can check if change should be printed.
In the package, you'll find TransformSetterCallInterceptor.cs
with intercept methods. You can adjust that as needed. There's also an assembly attribute specified TransformSetterCallRedirector
where you can configure some more options.
eventInterceptorTypeName
- if different thanTransformSetterCallInterceptor
replaceCallsFromNamespacesRegex
- it'll narrow down types to be looked at when searching for set transform callsExcludeFullMethodNameRegex
- full method name (including) type regex to be excluded. eg.MyType.+::MyMehtod
Separate assemblies will not have access to that TransformSetterCallInterceptor
when that happens interception will still be performed but using IL as defined in ModuleWeaver
- it'll use Debug.Log
with
- target transform that's being changed
- object that sets it
- value
Then you can further narrow it down from log console window and find exactly what you're after.
This is helpful if you like to weave external packages that you don't control (and don't wish to embed) - if you have control over assembly you can copy TransformSetterCallInterceptor.cs
class with assembly attribute there.
You can control few parameters of fallback IL weaving, it's done via XML attributes in FodyWeavers.xml
FallbackSampleNameFormat
- will control how you see entries in console, there are 3 tokens that can be used and refer to object that invokes the event:{0}
- target transform that's being changed{1}
- object that sets it{2}
- value
FallbackReplaceCallsFromNamespacesRegex
- it'll narrow down types to be looked at when searching for set transform callsFallbackExcludeFullMethodNameRegex
- full method name (including) type regex to be excluded. eg.MyType.+::MyMehtod
You can further configure Malimbe via FodyWeavers.xml
file, you'll find the details in their repository.
- Right now tool works just for direct property setters - it doesn't work with
.Set
methods (although it'd be rather straight forward to add) - You may see some errors that weaving assembly is not available when starting Unity, this is to do with compilation order and should not cause you issues, it'll be gone on next compilation. I've included weaver as source code with asmdef so it's easier to modify weaver. Ideally compiled DLL should just be included
- There are some DLLs included with the package and also included in Malimbe package, it's not easy to get them referenced without embedding Malimbe package. It shouldn't give you troubles but if something funny happens it'd be worth to look if that's not the cause.