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dpranke1a70d0c2016-12-01 02:42:291# Checking out and Building Chromium for Windows
2
Bruce Dawson4d1de592017-09-08 00:24:003There are instructions for other platforms linked from the
dpranke1a70d0c2016-12-01 02:42:294[get the code](get_the_code.md) page.
tfarina502f3882016-03-23 12:48:105
dpranke1a70d0c2016-12-01 02:42:296## Instructions for Google Employees
7
8Are you a Google employee? See
scottmg292538ae2017-01-12 00:10:559[go/building-chrome-win](https://goto.google.com/building-chrome-win) instead.
dpranke0ae7cad2016-11-30 07:47:5810
11[TOC]
12
13## System requirements
14
15* A 64-bit Intel machine with at least 8GB of RAM. More than 16GB is highly
16 recommended.
dpranke4b470c5b2017-01-19 17:38:0417* At least 100GB of free disk space on an NTFS-formatted hard drive. FAT32
18 will not work, as some of the Git packfiles are larger than 4GB.
Bruce Dawson97367b72017-10-18 00:47:4919* An appropriate version of Visual Studio, as described below.
Bruce Dawson52c749c2020-12-03 16:44:2620* Windows 10 or newer.
brettwc25693b32016-05-26 01:11:5221
tfarina502f3882016-03-23 12:48:1022## Setting up Windows
23
dpranke0ae7cad2016-11-30 07:47:5824### Visual Studio
tfarina502f3882016-03-23 12:48:1025
Aaron Gable7a173b7a2020-01-02 17:13:2426Chromium requires Visual Studio 2017 (>=15.7.2) to build, but VS2019 (>=16.0.0)
27is preferred. Visual Studio can also be used to debug Chromium, and VS2019 is
Bruce Dawsonfa551102019-06-11 23:50:0428preferred for this as it handles Chromium's large debug information much better.
Raul Tambre1bb5c1a2018-12-29 00:57:1229The clang-cl compiler is used but Visual Studio's header files, libraries, and
30some tools are required. Visual Studio Community Edition should work if its
31license is appropriate for you. You must install the "Desktop development with
32C++" component and the "MFC/ATL support" sub-components. This can be done from
33the command line by passing these arguments to the Visual Studio installer (see
34below for ARM64 instructions):
Bruce Dawson1c0979a62017-09-13 17:47:2135```shell
Bruce Dawsone42d7642018-12-10 23:50:0036$ PATH_TO_INSTALLER.EXE ^
37--add Microsoft.VisualStudio.Workload.NativeDesktop ^
38--add Microsoft.VisualStudio.Component.VC.ATLMFC ^
39--includeRecommended
Bruce Dawson1c0979a62017-09-13 17:47:2140```
pwnall43b43ba2016-08-22 19:29:2941
Bruce Dawsone42d7642018-12-10 23:50:0042If you want to build for ARM64 Win32 then some extra arguments are needed. The
43full set for that case is:
44```shell
45$ PATH_TO_INSTALLER.EXE ^
46--add Microsoft.VisualStudio.Workload.NativeDesktop ^
47--add Microsoft.VisualStudio.Component.VC.ATLMFC ^
48--add Microsoft.VisualStudio.Component.VC.Tools.ARM64 ^
49--add Microsoft.VisualStudio.Component.VC.MFC.ARM64 ^
50--includeRecommended
51```
52
Chunbo Huac76a7b22020-07-02 02:21:0053You must have the version 10.0.19041 or higher Windows 10 SDK installed. This
Bruce Dawsone42d7642018-12-10 23:50:0054can be installed separately or by checking the appropriate box in the Visual
55Studio Installer.
Bruce Dawsone9f20fff2018-03-03 01:58:3856
57The SDK Debugging Tools must also be installed. If the Windows 10 SDK was
58installed via the Visual Studio installer, then they can be installed by going
59to: Control Panel → Programs → Programs and Features → Select the "Windows
60Software Development Kit" → Change → Change → Check "Debugging Tools For
61Windows" → Change. Or, you can download the standalone SDK installer and use it
62to install the Debugging Tools.
Robert Sesekc8ffa1b2017-08-04 19:55:2263
dpranke0ae7cad2016-11-30 07:47:5864## Install `depot_tools`
tfarina502f3882016-03-23 12:48:1065
dpranke1a70d0c2016-12-01 02:42:2966Download the [depot_tools bundle](https://storage.googleapis.com/chrome-infra/depot_tools.zip)
dpranke0ae7cad2016-11-30 07:47:5867and extract it somewhere.
tfarina502f3882016-03-23 12:48:1068
dpranke0ae7cad2016-11-30 07:47:5869*** note
70**Warning:** **DO NOT** use drag-n-drop or copy-n-paste extract from Explorer,
71this will not extract the hidden “.git” folder which is necessary for
Bruce Dawson4d1de592017-09-08 00:24:0072depot_tools to autoupdate itself. You can use “Extract all…” from the
dpranke0ae7cad2016-11-30 07:47:5873context menu though.
74***
tfarina502f3882016-03-23 12:48:1075
Bruce Dawson4d1de592017-09-08 00:24:0076Add depot_tools to the start of your PATH (must be ahead of any installs of
dpranke4b470c5b2017-01-19 17:38:0477Python). Assuming you unzipped the bundle to C:\src\depot_tools, open:
tfarina502f3882016-03-23 12:48:1078
dpranke0ae7cad2016-11-30 07:47:5879Control Panel → System and Security → System → Advanced system settings
tfarina502f3882016-03-23 12:48:1080
dpranke4b470c5b2017-01-19 17:38:0481If you have Administrator access, Modify the PATH system variable and
82put `C:\src\depot_tools` at the front (or at least in front of any directory
83that might already have a copy of Python or Git).
tfarina502f3882016-03-23 12:48:1084
dpranke4b470c5b2017-01-19 17:38:0485If you don't have Administrator access, you can add a user-level PATH
86environment variable and put `C:\src\depot_tools` at the front, but
87if your system PATH has a Python in it, you will be out of luck.
dpranke0ae7cad2016-11-30 07:47:5888
89Also, add a DEPOT_TOOLS_WIN_TOOLCHAIN system variable in the same way, and set
90it to 0. This tells depot_tools to use your locally installed version of Visual
Aaron Gabledad9e0f2020-01-09 19:38:5291Studio (by default, depot_tools will try to use a google-internal version).
dpranke0ae7cad2016-11-30 07:47:5892
Andreas Papacharalampous1d22c9612020-06-13 23:11:1793You may also have to set variable `vs2017_install` or `vs2019_install` to your
94installation path of Visual Studio 2017 or 19, like
95`set vs2019_install=C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft Visual Studio\2019\Professional`
96for Visual Studio 2019.
97
dpranke0ae7cad2016-11-30 07:47:5898From a cmd.exe shell, run the command gclient (without arguments). On first
99run, gclient will install all the Windows-specific bits needed to work with
100the code, including msysgit and python.
101
102* If you run gclient from a non-cmd shell (e.g., cygwin, PowerShell),
103 it may appear to run properly, but msysgit, python, and other tools
104 may not get installed correctly.
105* If you see strange errors with the file system on the first run of gclient,
106 you may want to [disable Windows Indexing](http://tortoisesvn.tigris.org/faq.html#cantmove2).
107
Bruce Dawson4d1de592017-09-08 00:24:00108After running gclient open a command prompt and type `where python` and
109confirm that the depot_tools `python.bat` comes ahead of any copies of
110python.exe. Failing to ensure this can lead to overbuilding when
dpranke0ae7cad2016-11-30 07:47:58111using gn - see [crbug.com/611087](https://crbug.com/611087).
112
113## Get the code
114
Leonard Mosescu718c9ac2017-06-20 18:06:32115First, configure Git:
116
117```shell
118$ git config --global user.name "My Name"
119$ git config --global user.email "[email protected]"
120$ git config --global core.autocrlf false
121$ git config --global core.filemode false
122$ git config --global branch.autosetuprebase always
123```
124
sdy93387fa2016-12-01 01:03:44125Create a `chromium` directory for the checkout and change to it (you can call
dpranke0ae7cad2016-11-30 07:47:58126this whatever you like and put it wherever you like, as
127long as the full path has no spaces):
dpranke0ae7cad2016-11-30 07:47:58128
sdy93387fa2016-12-01 01:03:44129```shell
130$ mkdir chromium && cd chromium
131```
132
133Run the `fetch` tool from `depot_tools` to check out the code and its
dpranke0ae7cad2016-11-30 07:47:58134dependencies.
135
sdy93387fa2016-12-01 01:03:44136```shell
xiaoyin.l802e4b3e2016-12-04 22:17:30137$ fetch chromium
sdy93387fa2016-12-01 01:03:44138```
dpranke0ae7cad2016-11-30 07:47:58139
140If you don't want the full repo history, you can save a lot of time by
sdy93387fa2016-12-01 01:03:44141adding the `--no-history` flag to `fetch`.
dpranke0ae7cad2016-11-30 07:47:58142
sdy93387fa2016-12-01 01:03:44143Expect the command to take 30 minutes on even a fast connection, and many
144hours on slower ones.
dpranke0ae7cad2016-11-30 07:47:58145
sdy93387fa2016-12-01 01:03:44146When `fetch` completes, it will have created a hidden `.gclient` file and a
147directory called `src` in the working directory. The remaining instructions
148assume you have switched to the `src` directory:
dpranke0ae7cad2016-11-30 07:47:58149
sdy93387fa2016-12-01 01:03:44150```shell
151$ cd src
152```
dpranke0ae7cad2016-11-30 07:47:58153
sdy93387fa2016-12-01 01:03:44154*Optional*: You can also [install API
155keys](https://www.chromium.org/developers/how-tos/api-keys) if you want your
156build to talk to some Google services, but this is not necessary for most
157development and testing purposes.
dpranke0ae7cad2016-11-30 07:47:58158
dpranke1a70d0c2016-12-01 02:42:29159## Setting up the build
dpranke0ae7cad2016-11-30 07:47:58160
Tom Bridgwatereef401542018-08-17 00:54:43161Chromium uses [Ninja](https://ninja-build.org) as its main build tool along with
162a tool called [GN](https://gn.googlesource.com/gn/+/master/docs/quick_start.md)
163to generate `.ninja` files. You can create any number of *build directories*
164with different configurations. To create a build directory:
dpranke0ae7cad2016-11-30 07:47:58165
sdy93387fa2016-12-01 01:03:44166```shell
167$ gn gen out/Default
168```
dpranke0ae7cad2016-11-30 07:47:58169
sdy93387fa2016-12-01 01:03:44170* You only have to run this once for each new build directory, Ninja will
171 update the build files as needed.
172* You can replace `Default` with another name, but
173 it should be a subdirectory of `out`.
Aaron Gabledad9e0f2020-01-09 19:38:52174* For other build arguments, including release settings or using an alternate
175 version of Visual Studio, see [GN build
sdy93387fa2016-12-01 01:03:44176 configuration](https://www.chromium.org/developers/gn-build-configuration).
dpranke0ae7cad2016-11-30 07:47:58177 The default will be a debug component build matching the current host
178 operating system and CPU.
Tom Bridgwatereef401542018-08-17 00:54:43179* For more info on GN, run `gn help` on the command line or read the [quick
180 start guide](https://gn.googlesource.com/gn/+/master/docs/quick_start.md).
dpranke0ae7cad2016-11-30 07:47:58181### Faster builds
tfarina502f3882016-03-23 12:48:10182
dpranke0ae7cad2016-11-30 07:47:58183* Reduce file system overhead by excluding build directories from
184 antivirus and indexing software.
185* Store the build tree on a fast disk (preferably SSD).
brucedawsoncfc7fd52017-07-06 18:41:01186* The more cores the better (20+ is not excessive) and lots of RAM is needed
187(64 GB is not excessive).
tfarina502f3882016-03-23 12:48:10188
brucedawsoncfc7fd52017-07-06 18:41:01189There are some gn flags that can improve build speeds. You can specify these
190in the editor that appears when you create your output directory
191(`gn args out/Default`) or on the gn gen command line
192(`gn gen out/Default --args="is_component_build = true is_debug = true"`).
193Some helpful settings to consider using include:
194* `is_component_build = true` - this uses more, smaller DLLs, and incremental
195linking.
Bruce Dawsonfcd3deb12017-07-28 17:12:20196* `enable_nacl = false` - this disables Native Client which is usually not
197needed for local builds.
brucedawsoncfc7fd52017-07-06 18:41:01198* `target_cpu = "x86"` - x86 builds are slightly faster than x64 builds and
199support incremental linking for more targets. Note that if you set this but
Bruce Dawsonfcd3deb12017-07-28 17:12:20200don't' set enable_nacl = false then build times may get worse.
James Cook26699a92019-03-12 22:23:10201* `blink_symbol_level = 0` - turn off source-level debugging for
brucedawsoncfc7fd52017-07-06 18:41:01202blink to reduce build times, appropriate if you don't plan to debug blink.
brucedawsoncfc7fd52017-07-06 18:41:01203
Bruce Dawson817f47fb2020-05-01 22:29:08204In order to speed up linking you can set `symbol_level = 1` or
205`symbol_level = 0` - these options reduce the work the compiler and linker have
206to do. With `symbol_level = 1` the compiler emits file name and line number
207information so you can still do source-level debugging but there will be no
208local variable or type information. With `symbol_level = 0` there is no
209source-level debugging but call stacks still have function names. Changing
210`symbol_level` requires recompiling everything.
brucedawsoncfc7fd52017-07-06 18:41:01211
Bruce Dawsone9f20fff2018-03-03 01:58:38212In addition, Google employees should use goma, a distributed compilation system.
213Detailed information is available internally but the relevant gn arg is:
214* `use_goma = true`
brucedawsoncfc7fd52017-07-06 18:41:01215
216To get any benefit from goma it is important to pass a large -j value to ninja.
Bruce Dawsone9f20fff2018-03-03 01:58:38217A good default is 10\*numCores to 20\*numCores. If you run autoninja then it
218will automatically pass an appropriate -j value to ninja for goma or not.
219
220```shell
221$ autoninja -C out\Default chrome
222```
brucedawsoncfc7fd52017-07-06 18:41:01223
224When invoking ninja specify 'chrome' as the target to avoid building all test
225binaries as well.
226
227Still, builds will take many hours on many machines.
dpranke0ae7cad2016-11-30 07:47:58228
Bruce Dawsone9f20fff2018-03-03 01:58:38229### Why is my build slow?
230
231Many things can make builds slow, with Windows Defender slowing process startups
232being a frequent culprit. Have you ensured that the entire Chromium src
Bruce Dawson0bbe2d42018-03-06 19:45:55233directory is excluded from antivirus scanning (on Google machines this means
Bruce Dawsone9f20fff2018-03-03 01:58:38234putting it in a ``src`` directory in the root of a drive)? Have you tried the
235different settings listed above, including different link settings and -j
236values? Have you asked on the chromium-dev mailing list to see if your build is
237slower than expected for your machine's specifications?
238
Bruce Dawson89390172019-05-08 09:51:18239The next step is to gather some data. If you set the ``NINJA_SUMMARIZE_BUILD``
Bruce Dawsonb9988e92019-09-16 17:01:10240environment variable to 1 then ``autoninja`` will do three things. First, it
241will set the [NINJA_STATUS](https://ninja-build.org/manual.html#_environment_variables)
Bruce Dawson89390172019-05-08 09:51:18242environment variable so that ninja will print additional information while
243building Chrome. It will show how many build processes are running at any given
244time, how many build steps have completed, how many build steps have completed
245per second, and how long the build has been running, as shown here:
Bruce Dawsone9f20fff2018-03-03 01:58:38246
247```shell
Bruce Dawson89390172019-05-08 09:51:18248$ set NINJA_SUMMARIZE_BUILD=1
Bruce Dawsone9f20fff2018-03-03 01:58:38249$ autoninja -C out\Default base
250ninja: Entering directory `out\Default'
251[1 processes, 86/86 @ 2.7/s : 31.785s ] LINK(DLL) base.dll base.dll.lib base.dll.pdb
252```
253
Bruce Dawson89390172019-05-08 09:51:18254This makes slow process creation immediately obvious and lets you tell quickly
255if a build is running more slowly than normal.
256
257In addition, setting ``NINJA_SUMMARIZE_BUILD=1`` tells ``autoninja`` to print a
258build performance summary when the build completes, showing the slowest build
259steps and slowest build-step types, as shown here:
Bruce Dawsone9f20fff2018-03-03 01:58:38260
261```shell
262$ set NINJA_SUMMARIZE_BUILD=1
263$ autoninja -C out\Default base
Bruce Dawson2721f0b2019-11-08 18:41:27264Longest build steps:
265 0.1 weighted s to build obj/base/base/trace_log.obj (6.7 s elapsed time)
266 0.2 weighted s to build nasm.exe, nasm.exe.pdb (0.2 s elapsed time)
267 0.3 weighted s to build obj/base/base/win_util.obj (12.4 s elapsed time)
268 1.2 weighted s to build base.dll, base.dll.lib (1.2 s elapsed time)
269Time by build-step type:
270 0.0 s weighted time to generate 6 .lib files (0.3 s elapsed time sum)
271 0.1 s weighted time to generate 25 .stamp files (1.2 s elapsed time sum)
272 0.2 s weighted time to generate 20 .o files (2.8 s elapsed time sum)
273 1.7 s weighted time to generate 4 PEFile (linking) files (2.0 s elapsed
274time sum)
275 23.9 s weighted time to generate 770 .obj files (974.8 s elapsed time sum)
27626.1 s weighted time (982.9 s elapsed time sum, 37.7x parallelism)
277839 build steps completed, average of 32.17/s
Bruce Dawsone9f20fff2018-03-03 01:58:38278```
279
Bruce Dawson2721f0b2019-11-08 18:41:27280The "weighted" time is the elapsed time of each build step divided by the number
281of tasks that were running in parallel. This makes it an excellent approximation
282of how "important" a slow step was. A link that is entirely or mostly serialized
283will have a weighted time that is the same or similar to its elapsed time. A
284compile that runs in parallel with 999 other compiles will have a weighted time
285that is tiny.
286
Bruce Dawson0bbe2d42018-03-06 19:45:55287You can also generate these reports by manually running the script after a build:
288
289```shell
290$ python depot_tools\post_build_ninja_summary.py -C out\Default
291```
292
Bruce Dawsonb9988e92019-09-16 17:01:10293Finally, setting ``NINJA_SUMMARIZE_BUILD=1`` tells autoninja to tell Ninja to
294report on its own overhead by passing "-d stats". This can be helpful if, for
295instance, process creation (which shows up in the StartEdge metric) is making
296builds slow, perhaps due to antivirus interference due to clang-cl not being in
297an excluded directory:
Bruce Dawsone9f20fff2018-03-03 01:58:38298
299```shell
Bruce Dawsonb9988e92019-09-16 17:01:10300$ set NINJA_SUMMARIZE_BUILD=1
301$ autoninja -C out\Default base
302"c:\src\depot_tools\ninja.exe" -C out\Default base -j 10 -d stats
Bruce Dawsone9f20fff2018-03-03 01:58:38303metric count avg (us) total (ms)
304.ninja parse 3555 1539.4 5472.6
305canonicalize str 1383032 0.0 12.7
306canonicalize path 1402349 0.0 11.2
307lookup node 1398245 0.0 8.1
308.ninja_log load 2 118.0 0.2
309.ninja_deps load 2 67.5 0.1
310node stat 2516 29.6 74.4
311depfile load 2 1132.0 2.3
312StartEdge 88 3508.1 308.7
313FinishCommand 87 1670.9 145.4
314CLParser::Parse 45 1889.1 85.0
315```
316
Bruce Dawsonb9988e92019-09-16 17:01:10317You can also get a visual report of the build performance with
318[ninjatracing](https://github.com/nico/ninjatracing). This converts the
319.ninja_log file into a .json file which can be loaded into chrome://tracing:
320
321```shell
322$ python ninjatracing out\Default\.ninja_log >build.json
323```
324
dpranke0ae7cad2016-11-30 07:47:58325## Build Chromium
326
Max Morozf5b31fcd2018-08-10 21:55:48327Build Chromium (the "chrome" target) with Ninja using the command:
dpranke0ae7cad2016-11-30 07:47:58328
dpranke1a70d0c2016-12-01 02:42:29329```shell
Max Morozf5b31fcd2018-08-10 21:55:48330$ autoninja -C out\Default chrome
dpranke1a70d0c2016-12-01 02:42:29331```
dpranke0ae7cad2016-11-30 07:47:58332
Max Morozf5b31fcd2018-08-10 21:55:48333`autoninja` is a wrapper that automatically provides optimal values for the
334arguments passed to `ninja`.
335
dpranke0ae7cad2016-11-30 07:47:58336You can get a list of all of the other build targets from GN by running
337`gn ls out/Default` from the command line. To compile one, pass to Ninja
338the GN label with no preceding "//" (so for `//chrome/test:unit_tests`
339use ninja -C out/Default chrome/test:unit_tests`).
340
341## Run Chromium
342
343Once it is built, you can simply run the browser:
344
dpranke1a70d0c2016-12-01 02:42:29345```shell
346$ out\Default\chrome.exe
347```
348
349(The ".exe" suffix in the command is actually optional).
dpranke0ae7cad2016-11-30 07:47:58350
351## Running test targets
352
353You can run the tests in the same way. You can also limit which tests are
354run using the `--gtest_filter` arg, e.g.:
355
dpranke1a70d0c2016-12-01 02:42:29356```shell
357$ out\Default\unit_tests.exe --gtest_filter="PushClientTest.*"
358```
dpranke0ae7cad2016-11-30 07:47:58359
360You can find out more about GoogleTest at its
361[GitHub page](https://github.com/google/googletest).
362
363## Update your checkout
364
365To update an existing checkout, you can run
366
dpranke1a70d0c2016-12-01 02:42:29367```shell
368$ git rebase-update
Bruce Dawsonef0b5452020-10-03 00:13:09369$ gclient sync -D
dpranke1a70d0c2016-12-01 02:42:29370```
dpranke0ae7cad2016-11-30 07:47:58371
372The first command updates the primary Chromium source repository and rebases
373any of your local branches on top of tip-of-tree (aka the Git branch `origin/master`).
Bruce Dawson4d1de592017-09-08 00:24:00374If you don't want to use this script, you can also just use `git pull` or
dpranke0ae7cad2016-11-30 07:47:58375other common Git commands to update the repo.
376
Bruce Dawsonef0b5452020-10-03 00:13:09377The second command syncs the subrepositories to the appropriate versions,
378deleting those that are no longer needed, and re-runs the hooks as needed.
379
380### Editing and Debugging With the Visual Studio IDE
381
382You can use the Visual Studio IDE to edit and debug Chrome, with or without
383Intellisense support.
384
385#### Using Visual Studio Intellisense
386
387If you want to use Visual Studio Intellisense when developing Chromium, use the
388`--ide` command line argument to `gn gen` when you generate your output
389directory (as described on the [get the code](https://dev.chromium.org/developers/how-tos/get-the-code)
390page):
391
392```shell
393$ gn gen --ide=vs out\Default
394$ devenv out\Default\all.sln
395```
396
397GN will produce a file `all.sln` in your build directory. It will internally
398use Ninja to compile while still allowing most IDE functions to work (there is
399no native Visual Studio compilation mode). If you manually run "gen" again you
400will need to resupply this argument, but normally GN will keep the build and
401IDE files up to date automatically when you build.
402
403The generated solution will contain several thousand projects and will be very
404slow to load. Use the `--filters` argument to restrict generating project files
405for only the code you're interested in. Although this will also limit what
406files appear in the project explorer, debugging will still work and you can
407set breakpoints in files that you open manually. A minimal solution that will
408let you compile and run Chrome in the IDE but will not show any source files
409is:
410
411```
412$ gn gen --ide=vs --filters=//chrome --no-deps out\Default
413```
414
415You can selectively add other directories you care about to the filter like so:
416`--filters=//chrome;//third_party/WebKit/*;//gpu/*`.
417
418There are other options for controlling how the solution is generated, run `gn
419help gen` for the current documentation.
420
421#### Using Visual Studio without Intellisense
422
423It is also possible to debug and develop Chrome in Visual Studio without the
424overhead of a multi-project solution file. Simply "open" your chrome.exe binary
425with `File->Open->Project/Solution`, or from a Visual Studio command prompt like
426so: `devenv /debugexe out\Debug\chrome.exe <your arguments>`. Many of Visual
427Studio's code exploration features will not work in this configuration, but by
428installing the [VsChromium Visual Studio Extension](https://chromium.github.io/vs-chromium/)
429you can get the source code to appear in the solution explorer window along
430with other useful features such as code search. You can add multiple executables
431of interest (base_unittests.exe, browser_tests.exe) to your solution with
432`File->Add->Existing Project...` and change which one will be debugged by
433right-clicking on them in `Solution Explorer` and selecting `Set as Startup
434Project`. You can also change their properties, including command line
435arguments, by right-clicking on them in `Solution Explorer` and selecting
436`Properties`.
437
438By default when you start debugging in Visual Studio the debugger will only
439attach to the main browser process. To debug all of Chrome, install
440[Microsoft's Child Process Debugging Power Tool](https://blogs.msdn.microsoft.com/devops/2014/11/24/introducing-the-child-process-debugging-power-tool/).
441You will also need to run Visual Studio as administrator, or it will silently
442fail to attach to some of Chrome's child processes.
443