Extension missing when debugging Roslyn analyser in VS2019 - visual-studio-2019

I created a new analyzer project in VS 2019 and debugged by pressing F5; all fine.
Then applied changes and renamed the 3 projects. When hit F5 for debugging, breakpoints for the the new version won’t hit.
Then I browsed the extensions in the debugging VS instance and found the old one, with the old name. Removed that one, closed the instance, finish debugging and hit F5 again.
Now, the debugging instance of VS 2019 doesn’t contain the analyzer I’m trying to debug as an extension, and breakpoints won’t hit.
What should I do?

Related

Breakpoints not hit in view/cshtml files after upgrade to v16.6.2?

I've been running VS 2019 for awhile now with no problems. I've been working on the same 2 solutions for the last year with no problems. Friday I upgraded to the latest version (16.6.2) because VS suggested I should. As soon as I did that, breakpoints in any MVC views no longer function in my project.
I have gone through the standard checklist of the old "No symbols have been loaded for this document" message. I have confirmed that the PDB files are in the right place, that the DLL and PDBs are of the same version, etc. Everything is exactly the same setting-wise as its always been. Friday morning it worked.
I installed the latest update (v16.6.2) and now the same breakpoint I had working a few hours before no longer works. Within this same project I CAN set a breakpoint in a controller or other classes - it seems to only be the .cshtml pages that are the problem.
My assumption is that one of 2 things occurred here: either v16.6.2 introduced a new setting I need to change in order for this to work, or v16.6.2 broke it. I have scoured the webs looking for any settings changes in this release and have come up empty. I have done the standard machine restart and all that stuff. No dice there either.
Are there any other troubleshooting steps I have missed?

Xamarin Android in Visual Studio -- fsproj file stores the device I ran in the debugger

I've got a Xamarin Android project, written in F# (and I suspect I will encounter a similar problem in C#).
I always debug the app on a device, for various reasons. After disconnecting my phone from my PC, the fsproj file changed as follows:
- <SelectedDevice>Samsung SM-G925F</SelectedDevice>
+ <SelectedDevice>10.1" Marshmallow (6.0.0) XHDPI Tablet</SelectedDevice>
I must say, I am rather surprised that this is still happening in Visual Studio. Clearly, it is very bad for collaboration if the project file gets re-written every time I debug the project with a new device.
Is there a setting I can apply that prevents this from happening?

What is the purpose of "building" a .NET MVC application if it runs fine without it?

I have a simple MVC Web application in the .NET Framework. To run it, I can click the green arrow ("play" button) in Visual Studio, which does a "build" and starts a Web browser pointing to the application.
Or, I can just start up IIS Express with the proper command line options, and navigate to localhost:8080 in a browser and run the application without a "build".
What is the purpose of "building" the application in Visual Studio if it runs fine without it?
The simple answer is that it doesn't run without the build step; your assumptions are wrong.
However, Visual Studio continuously monitors your source files and compiles them, e.g. to be able to show intellisense suggestions and compiler errors while you type. This means that there are in fact compiled binaries based on your source somewhere, maybe just not in the bin folder under your project root (that somewhere might be in memory, or in some cache location on disk, depending on circumstances out of scope for this question).
It's also very likely that you've previously built your application, resulting in binaries in your bin folder, even if you didn't do it with the purpose of running the application right after. In either case, if you get it working with IIS Express it's because it can find compiled binaries somewhere, and run those.
The main reason to have Visual Studio explicitly rebuild your app when you hit play, is to make sure that you're running the latest version of your code. Sure, it takes a few extra seconds every time you start the debugger, but it's nothing compared to the time you'd lose trying to track down a bug that you've already fixed in your code, but which still manifests in the running application, because the running application is an outdated version. (It also makes things like stepping through the code much less confusing, since, again, the source code on file will always be in sync with the running application.)

How can I debug this error: 'Debugging information for iisexpress.exe cannot be found or does not match'?

I've been working on an MVC 5 code first project for a few months and (seemingly) out of nowhere, Visual Studio is refusing to debug and giving me some strange errors.
When I try to run the application Ctrl+F5 it builds ok but the browser never gets beyond the loading stage, I still have the pinwheel in the browser tab, but the app never loads.
When I try to debug the applicaiton F5 it builds ok, but then comes up with 2 errors, firstly Debugging information for iisexpress.exe cannot be found or does not match. Cannot find or open the PDB file. and then Process with an Id of xxxx is not running.
I've tried loading symbols from MS (https://stackoverflow.com/a/8138518/1778169), using a different database name, uninstalling VS extensions, performing all Windows Updates, repairing the VS installation and even reinstalling VS entirely. Nothing seems to help.
I'm not very familiar with PDB files, but I have done nothing knowingly to change this, and they seem to be in the right place:
I am running out of ideas, but really want to avoid a Windows reinstall if possible.
It's only happening in this one project, so the problem would seem to be with the project itself, not the installation. But I have no idea where to start debugging this problem, or looking for a solution.
Possibly Relevant
I tried running the app on a custom domain (set up in the hosts file and IIS Express's ApplicationHosts.config file). In an attempt to solve this problem I reverted these settings back to the default localhost:[port]. This doesn't seem to have made any difference, but thought I should mention it just in case.
My problem was that the Native Code box was ticked in the Debuggers section of the Web section in Project Properties.
I don't know how this came to be ticked, I certainly never ticked it.
Either way, unticking this box solved my problem.

Visual Studio debugging/loading very slow

I'm at wit's end. Visual Studio is typically painfully slow to debug or just plain load ("start without debugging") my ASP.NET MVC sites. Not always: at first, the projects will load nice and fast, but once they load slow, they'll always load slowly after that. I could be waiting 1-2 minutes or more.
My setup:
I'm using Visual Studio 2012 Express, currently, but I've had the same problem in Visual Studio 2010 Express as well. My solution is stored on a network drive; specifically, it's My Documents redirected to a network drive, if it matters. (It shouldn't. There are times where my site loads very fast under this setup.)
I load in Internet  Explorer 9 usually, but the same problem happens in Firefox.
This can happen in any ASP.NET MVC project I work on, and it seems to revolve around having DisplayTemplates, which all my ASP.NET MVC projects do. And it's all C# and Razor if that mattered.
Symptoms:
The system will load my symbols hundreds of times. Basically, the following, but there are at least 300 such rows, each with ever-so-slightly different DLL files for the same CSHTMLs:
'iisexpress.exe' (Managed (v4.0.30319)): Loaded 'C:\Windows\Microsoft.NET\Framework\v4.0.30319\Temporary ASP.NET Files\root\b63f8236\6775085d\App_Web_contact.cshtml.22013bb9.xighmhow.dll', Symbols loaded.
'iisexpress.exe' (Managed (v4.0.30319)): Loaded 'C:\Windows\Microsoft.NET\Framework\v4.0.30319\Temporary ASP.NET Files\root\b63f8236\6775085d\App_Web_contact.cshtml.22013bb9.cv5hktkf.dll', Symbols loaded.
'iisexpress.exe' (Managed (v4.0.30319)): Loaded 'C:\Windows\Microsoft.NET\Framework\v4.0.30319\Temporary ASP.NET Files\root\b63f8236\6775085d\App_Web_statuscode.cshtml.22013bb9.1o77hs8i.dll', Symbols loaded.
'iisexpress.exe' (Managed (v4.0.30319)): Loaded 'C:\Windows\Microsoft.NET\Framework\v4.0.30319\Temporary ASP.NET Files\root\b63f8236\6775085d\App_Web_statuscode.cshtml.22013bb9.jja-77mw.dll', Symbols loaded.
'iisexpress.exe' (Managed (v4.0.30319)): Loaded 'C:\Windows\Microsoft.NET\Framework\v4.0.30319\Temporary ASP.NET Files\root\b63f8236\6775085d\App_Web_location.cshtml.22013bb9.l_e9ev_s.dll', Symbols loaded.
'iisexpress.exe' (Managed (v4.0.30319)): Loaded 'C:\Windows\Microsoft.NET\Framework\v4.0.30319\Temporary ASP.NET Files\root\b63f8236\6775085d\App_Web_location.cshtml.22013bb9.b4n59gom.dll', Symbols loaded.
In the above, I've got three DisplayTemplates: "Contact", "Location", and "StatusCode". It appears that IIS is loading symbols twice for each time the display template gets called. Thus, if I'm displaying a table of 100 entries that call all three of these display templates, it's 600 separate symbols loaded.
This isn't a fast operation either. The log files that IIS generates take about 200  ms for each symbol to load. Thus, super-long delays.
What I've Tried:
Debug or Release version, it doesn't matter.
Putting my project on a full IIS implementation on a web server runs it super fast with no problems.
Cassini, IIS  Express 7.5, and IIS  Express 8.0 all have the problem.
Delete All Breakpoints does nothing.
Clean Solution, or deleting the .suo also do nothing.
If I repair IIS  Express/ delete the My Docs\IISExpress folder, or repair/reinstall Visual Studio → the issue MAY go away, but only for a while before it comes right back.
Any advice at all is appreciated.
To answer more questions, yes my machine definitely has horsepower. The infuriating thing is that the same project, with NOTHING altered, can sometimes load very quickly, typically after I repair IIS  Express and delete the My Docs\IISExpress folder. Eventually, "something" happens and it's down to 2 minutes to load again. What I'm working on is not a complicated project. No external libraries or dependencies and my VS.NET has no add-ons whatsoever.
Of note, this machine has Symantec Endpoint Protection, which has a history of causing havoc. But disabling it outright (it's good to be an administrator) did not fix the problem.
I have a theory at this point. I'm thinking this is all because I'm working off a redirected folder off a network share. While the debugger was going through its hundreds of "loaded symbols" lines, I paused to see what it was doing. It was in my code, loading the DisplayTemplate I had. Stepping into the template output this:
Step into: Stepping over non-user code 'System.Threading.WaitHandle.InternalWaitOne'
Step into: Stepping over non-user code 'System.Threading.WaitHandle.WaitOne'
Step into: Stepping over non-user code 'System.CodeDom.Compiler.Executor.ExecWaitWithCaptureUnimpersonated'
Step into: Stepping over non-user code 'System.CodeDom.Compiler.Executor.ExecWaitWithCapture'
Step into: Stepping over non-user code 'Microsoft.CSharp.CSharpCodeGenerator.FromFileBatch'
Step into: Stepping over non-user code 'Microsoft.CSharp.CSharpCodeGenerator.System.CodeDom.Compiler.ICodeCompiler.CompileAssemblyFromFileBatch'
Step into: Stepping over non-user code 'System.Web.Compilation.AssemblyBuilder.Compile'
'iisexpress.exe' (Managed (v4.0.30319)): Loaded 'C:\Windows\Microsoft.NET\Framework\v4.0.30319\Temporary ASP.NET Files\root\b63f8236\6775085d\App_Web_statuscode.cshtml.22013bb9.bciuyg14.dll', Symbols loaded.
Step into: Stepping over non-user code 'System.Web.Compilation.BuildManager.CompileWebFile'
Step into: Stepping over non-user code 'System.Web.Compilation.BuildManager.GetVPathBuildResultInternal'
Step into: Stepping over non-user code 'System.Web.Compilation.BuildManager.GetVPathBuildResultWithNoAssert'
Step into: Stepping over non-user code 'System.Web.Compilation.BuildManager.GetVirtualPathObjectFactory'
Step into: Stepping over non-user code 'System.Web.Mvc.BuildManagerWrapper.System.Web.Mvc.IBuildManager.FileExists'
Step into: Stepping over non-user code 'System.Web.Mvc.VirtualPathProviderViewEngine.GetPathFromGeneralName'
Step into: Stepping over non-user code 'System.Web.Mvc.VirtualPathProviderViewEngine.FindPartialView'
Step into: Stepping over non-user code 'System.Web.Mvc.ViewEngineCollection.Find'
Step into: Stepping over non-user code 'System.Web.Mvc.ViewEngineCollection.FindPartialView'
Step into: Stepping over non-user code 'System.Web.Mvc.Html.TemplateHelpers.ActionCacheViewItem.Execute'
'iisexpress.exe' (Managed (v4.0.30319)): Loaded 'C:\Windows\Microsoft.NET\Framework\v4.0.30319\Temporary ASP.NET Files\root\b63f8236\6775085d\App_Web_statuscode.cshtml.22013bb9.kwj3uqan.dll', Symbols loaded.
Step into: Stepping over non-user code 'System.RuntimeType.CreateInstanceSlow'
Step into: Stepping over non-user code 'System.Web.Mvc.DependencyResolver.DefaultDependencyResolver.GetService'
Step into: Stepping over non-user code 'System.Web.Mvc.BuildManagerViewEngine.DefaultViewPageActivator.Create'
Step into: Stepping over non-user code 'System.Web.Mvc.BuildManagerCompiledView.Render'
It looks like Visual Studio is recompiling my display template every time it's called, which is again, hundreds of times. My theory is that Visual Studio compiles the file, saves it to the network share, then somehow stamps a new time on it, and Visual Studio then thinks the file has changed. Thus, Visual Studio recompiles it yet again. Only a theory though; I really have no clue.
For one, apparently, I have offline files (this is a desktop computer in an office; I couldn't care less). I'm going to disable, reboot, and retry tomorrow.
Plus, moving my project, as is, to the local C: fixes it. It loads very quickly. But this is not ideal in a work environment. I lose Previous Versions, my code isn't backed up at all unless I manually copy it, and it's no longer shared with anyone.
I can make do with copying it back and forth from C to the network share if it comes to it. It's much more annoying to wait two minutes for every page to load.
Here is how I solved the "slow symbol loading" problem in Visual Studio 2012:
Go to Tools -> Options -> Debugging -> General
CHECK the checkmark next to "Enable Just My Code".
Go to Tools -> Options -> Debugging -> Symbols
Click on the "..." button and create/select a new folder somewhere on your local computer to store cached symbols. I named mine "Symbol caching" and put it in Documents -> Visual Studio 2012.
Click on "Load all symbols" and wait for the symbols to be downloaded from Microsoft's servers, which may take a while. Note that Load all symbols button is only available while debugging.
UNCHECK the checkmark next to "Microsoft Symbol Servers" to prevent Visual Studio from remotely querying the Microsoft servers.
Click "OK".
From now on, symbol loading should be much faster.
Note that if you make any changes/downloads to Microsoft assemblies, you may need to go back into the Symbols dialog box and "Load all symbols" again.
Turning off intelliTrace fixed this for me.
In Visual Studio, Tools -> Options -> IntelliTrace
Then, uncheck the checkbox for "Enable IntelliTrace".
None of this worked for me but I found a Breakpoint on a symbol that was deleted. Seems 2010 was hanging on it. To see if this is your issue do debug->windows->breakpoints If any are in there just delete them.
Saunders, mentioned he checked for that but it was not mentioned in the solutions for this problem. Maybe common knowledge for some, but not all of us.
I deleted the "Temporary ASP.NET Files" folder and my localhost page load improved dramatically. Here is the path... %temp%\Temporary ASP.NET Files\
I experienced the same problem and tried most of the resolutions above. Simply deleting cache and temp files end up working for me.
Try removing the contents of these two folders:
C:\Users\\{UserName}\AppData\Local\Microsoft\WebsiteCache
and
C:\Users\\{UserName}\AppData\Local\Temp (in particular the iisexpress and Temporary ASP.NET Files folders).
This can be set up to happen automatically on logging on to Windows by adding a cmd file to the C:\Users\\{username}\AppData\Roaming\Microsoft\Windows\Start Menu\Programs\Startup folder with the following content:
rmdir C:\Users\\{username}\AppData\Local\Microsoft\WebsiteCache /s /q
rmdir C:\Users\\{username}\AppData\Local\Temp /s /q
Do you have enabled FusionLog?
My VisualStudio was very slow to start, open solution and load symbols when start debugging. It was slow only on my machine, but not on other machines.
FusionLog writes tons of log stuff to disk. Just disabling it on RegEdit solved everything, on my case.
This is the FusionLog key on registry:
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Fusion
Check ForceLog value (1 enabled, 0 disabled).
I think I may finally at least know the cause, though not the reason why. When the problem started occurring again, I noticed a ton of "conhost.exe" processes orphaned. I would close Visual Studio and they would remain open. Ending task on each of them has finally, reliably solved the problem. [hopefully]
(Just note, conhost.exe isn't a Visual Studio process though Visual Studio uses it. Thus, other users out there may have other applications out there that run conhost.exe. I know my machine doesn't which is why I can safely end task all of them but YMMV.)
As to why this happens? It seems to occur when I open more than one project at once, which I tend to do often, even though I only build and debug one of them at any time.
Edit #1 - This isn't a "silver bullet" unfortunately. It doesn't always work for me. Typically, when things get slow, I just close all of my Visual Studio sessions, then go into the task manager and end any instance of it, conhost.exe, iisexpress.exe Microsoft.VisualStudio.Web.Host.exe and MSBuild.exe I can find.
Typically, after that, when I restart my project it'll then load quickly. But not always.
Really I think the best course of action is probably to not build & debug code off a redirected folder/network share.
Edit #2 - Two years later, and this is still an issue for me in Visual Studio Community 2013, but I did seem to at least find the culprit task: Explorer.exe. Yeah, who knew. The moment I end that task, bam, page loads in a single second.
If I have a Windows Explorer file browser open to my redirected network drive (which is often since that's where my code is), this problem seems to occur. Closing the window isn't enough, I have to kill the whole Explorer.exe task. I could only guess what it's doing...going nuts with file handles?
I can usually use the task manager to start up a new explorer.exe task (I can only take so much alt-tabbing), and Visual Studio will continue to load nice and quick. But if I so much as open Windows Explorer again, it almost always goes back to super-slow-mo.
So, if you've got a redirected network share, give it a shot. It sure beats working locally.
The above are all good solutions and I tried all of them, but got the solution here, which is to
Debug -> Delete All Breakpoints
For me it was IE 9.08.8112.16241. As soon as I used Firefox or Chrome there was no sluggish debugging with F10 or F11. I do not know what the problem with IE is but I officially despise using it for testing now.
Update: I have turned off all IE program add-ons and it is back to full speed. Turning them on one at a time revealed that LastPass (in my case) was the culprit. I guess I do not get to blame MS after all.
Several years into the future...
If you are using Brave you can easily access your extensions and turn them off one at a time (or several) while debugging.
brave://extensions
Just click the toggle slider. Notice that all of mine are on except for DuckDuckGo Privacy essentials. They are not removed, just temporarily disabled.
For me, I implemented this tip which basically drastically improved performance by adding the following two attributes to compilation tag in web.config
<compilation ... batch="false" optimizeCompilations="true"> ... </compilation>
What does batch="false" do?
It makes pre-compilation more selective by compiling only pages that
have changed and require re-compiling
What exactly is the optimizeCompilations doing? Source
ASP.NET uses a per application hash code which includes the state of a
number of things, including the bin and App_Code folder, and
global.asax. Whenever an ASP.NET app domain starts, it checks if this
hash code has changed from what it previously computed. If it has,
then the entire codegen folder (where compiled and shadow copied
assemblies live) is wiped out.
When this optimization is turned on (via optimizeCompilations="true"), the hash no longer takes into account
bin, App_Code and global.asax. As a result, if those change we don't
wipe out the codegen folder.
Reference: Compilation element on MSDN
I had execution perfomance troubles with debugging too and i tried very many options of debugger. In my case huge perfomance achieved when i change this options:
Tools - Options - Debugging - Output Window - (General output settings - All debug output) - OFF
I had problems with slow Visual Studio debugging when "Native Code" debugger was enabled. Try disabling it.
On "Visual Studio 2012" go to:
Project Properties ->
Web ->
Debuggers (bottom of page). ->
Disable all except ASP.NET
Hope it helps.
Similar questions: 1, 2
In my case, it was the .NET Reflector Visual Studio Extension (version 8.3.0.93) with VS 2012. Debugging was taking 10 seconds for each Step Over (F10).
In Visual Studio, go to Tools/Extensions and Updates... and disable the .NET Reflector Visual Studio Extension. Don't forget to restart Visual Studio.
In my case it was
Tools/Options/Debugging/General/Enable JavaScript debugging for ASP.NET (Chrome and IE)
Once I unchecked this, my debug start went from 45-60 seconds down to 0-5 seconds.
One time, after a power outage, I had to face the same slowness problem each time a breakpoint was hit or a Exception was thrown.
I had the vague remembering that the "suo" file (in the same directory as the "sln" solution file) can be corrupted and make everything slow down.
I deleted my "suo" files and everything was ok. The .suo files deletion is harmless and only implies to recreate my windows layout plus the starting project and a few other non critical customizations.
I was also facing this issue, below are the steps that I perform and it works for me always:
Deleting the solution's .suo file.
Deleting the Temporary ASP.NET Files
(You can find it at find it at %WINDOW%\Microsoft.NET\Framework\\Temporary ASP.NET Files)
Deleting all breakpoints in the application.
I don't know if you're still having this issue, but I debug sites in Visual Studio by attaching the debugger to the process itself rather than letting VS do it for me and I have found it to greatly improve times. I use an extension for VS called AttachTo and I have a small article on how I use it here.
I hope this helps.
My slow VS issue was resolved by disabling the Browser Link
If someone notices this behavior coming out of left field, check to make sure you don't have any breakpoints set in web.config. I must have set one with a stray mouse click, and it really slowed down all debug operations.
After spending all day waiting for symbols to load as slow as turtle speed, mixing and switching between all the possible combinations: Just My Code, Caching symbols, Intellitrace, Just-In-Time, killing processes, etc.
My solution was actually to disable the antivirus. Yeah, Windows Defender was slowing my project launch! It would check all the dlls as Visual Studio requested them and slowed the whole symbol load process.
I have to say our machines have great specs to compile the solution really fast, so that was never a problem. We code in VS 2013 Ultimate.
Emptying the symbol cache worked for me.
See: menu bar / Tools / Options / Debugging / Symbols / Empty Symbol Cache
In Visual Studio:
Tools -> Options -> Debugging -> Symbols
Choose "Only specified modules". Click the "specify modules" link, and add a blank module (click the new document button and hit OK).
to Clear cache etc. use Options 1 & 2; for settings/troubleshooting Options 3 & 4, enjoy!
Option 1: Navigate to IIS express , clear cache and sites
cd "C:\Program Files (x86)\IIS Express\"
run this appcmd.exe list site /xml | appcmd delete site /in
run this Del /S /F /Q %temp% - to clear the Userprofile Temp folder.
run this Del /S /F /Q %Windir%\Temp
Also, clear your temp files in %temp% and logout, or reboot
this clears the Windows temp folder. This will delete all the sites, enjoy!
Option 2: remove/recreate the temp folders
Cmd> rmdir C:\Users\\{username}\AppData\Local\Microsoft\WebsiteCache /s /q
Cmd> rmdir C:\Users\\{username}\AppData\Local\Temp /s /q
Option 3: JMC (Just My Code) Option from MSDN
To enable or disable Just My Code in Visual Studio, under Tools > Options (or Debug > Options) > Debugging > General, select or deselect Enable Just My Code.
Option 4: configure the Visual Studio/Disable Common plugin issues
Even more Visual Studio settings
You can also configure the Visual Studio and disable resource-killing features on the environment, cant remember where I got this, but threes some more I will post shortly.
Environment -> General
Uncheck “Automatically adjust visual experience based on client
performance”
Uncheck “Enable rich client visual experience” Check
“Use hardware graphics acceleration if available”
Environment -> AutoRecover
Uncheck “Save AutoRecover information every”
Environment -> Documents
Check “Save documents as Unicode when data cannot be saved in codepage”
Environment -> Keyboard
Set “ForceGC” to ctrl+num1
Set “ReSharper_Toggle” to ctrl+num0 (if ReSharper is used)
Set “ReSharper_EnableDaemon” to ctrl+num8 (if ReSharper is used)
Environment -> Startup
Set “At startup” to “Show empty environment at startup”
Uncheck “Download content every”
Environment -> Synchronized settings
Uncheck “Synchronize settings across devices when signed into Visual Studio”
Asp.net core debugging was painfully slow because of unknown VS extension had replaced default Just in Time debugger.
I have found such message in the OPTIONS\DEBUGGING\Just-In-Time configuration tab (as warning text).
Another debugger has registered itself as the Just-In-Time debugger. To repair, enable Just-In-Time debugging or run Visual Studio repair.
Description: https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ssc8234s.aspx?f=255&MSPPError=-2147217396
Returning back the default JIT debugger (just checked Managed option that was unchecked) solve all my problems.
In my case I noticed that disabling my internet connection would make it run as fast as with ctrl-f5, so I went to debug->options->symbols and just unchecked all .pdb locations.
Seems like VS was trying to connect to these servers every time a debug session was launched.
Note that disabling Debug->Options->Debugging->General "Enable source support" or "Require source files to exactly match the original version" wouldn't make any difference.
Similar problem wasted better half of my day!
Since solution for my problem was different from whats said here, I'm going to post it so it might help someone else.
Mine was a breakpoint. I had a "Break at function" breakpoint (i.e instead of pressing F9 on a code line, we create them using the breakpoints window) which is supposed to stop in a library function outside my project.
And I had "Use Intellisense to verify the function name" CHECKED. (Info here.)
This slowed down vs like hell (project start-up from 2 seconds to 5 minutes).
Removing the break point solved it for good.
One thing that worked for me after doing all the above was:
In the Threads window (Debug->Windows->Threads), set Group by to None. This can only be done while debugging.
This was having an impact even after closing that window.
Open the solution folder in windows explorer, close the visual studio, delete .suo file from windows explorer.
Now open the project in visual studio, hopefully debugger will attached/detached fastly.
For me it was conditional breakpoints. Those seem to really slow things down.
Go to your environment variables and look for the key _NT_SYMBOL_PATH.
Delete it.
Voila, worked like a charm.

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