I've created a simple 1 file java application that iterates through a loop, calls some functions, allocates some memory, adds some numbers, etc. I run that application via eclipse's Run As->Java Application.
The running application shows up in Java VisualVM under Local.
I double click on that application and go to the Profiler tab.
The default settings are:
Start profiling from classes: my.main.package.**
Do not profile classes: java.*, javax.*,
sun.*, sunw.*, com.sun.*
I click on CPU. The CPU and Memory buttons gray out. Nothing happens.
The Status says profiling inactive.
When my application terminates the Status says application terminated.
What am I doing wrong here? Are there some settings I need to tweak? Do I need to set a VM flag when I launch my application?
I had the same issue after java 1.7.0_45 update. I had to delete the following folder:
C:\users\'username'\AppData\Local\Temp\hsperfdata_'username'
After doing so, everything works like a charm.
I'd guess the issue relates to the application being started from within Eclipse, this is because JVisualVM expects to find data in the java.io.tmpdir directory (usually C:\Users\[your username]\AppData\Local\Temp\hsperfdata_[your username] on a Windows system).
I assume rather than in the normal location where JPS, JVisualVM etc. expects it, Eclipse puts the data in it's own temp folder?
If so, try invoking JVisualVM using jvisualvm -J-Djava.io.tmpdir=[Eclipse's temp directory] to explicitly tell it where that data is.
If you can't find the hsperfdata_$USER folder, try just running your application outside Eclipse in the usual command line Java way.
Also note that there was a bug affecting the temp folder (case sensitivity) introduced around 1.6.0_23, so maybe you'd benefit by updating to a more recent Java 6 (or 7) build?
Mikaveli, Kuba and Somaiah Kumbera have provided great solutions. Just adding what I have done to make things work.
I first checked the location C:\users\'username'\AppData\Local\Temp\hsperfdata_'username' There was no file named with the process ID of my program running inside eclipse.
I simply stopped the program and added the following parameter to the Run Configurations of the program (Run Configurations -> Arguments -> VM Arguments)
-Djava.io.tmpdir=C:\users\'username'\AppData\Local\Temp\hsperfdata_'username'
I started the program again. Still could not profile it. But now I have a file created for the process at the given temp directory.
Then, a simple restart of VisualVM did the trick.
I had the same issue, but with the following symptoms:
I started jetty, with the work directory in
C:\Users\t852124\AppData\Local\Temp
Jetty was creating the hsperfdata_ directory but not setting a processID in it
So when I started visualVM, it could not get any java process info.
I solved this by starting jetty with the -Djava.io.tmpdir=C:/temp/java option.
Now when I started jetty, the process ID was created as a file in the hsperfdata_ directory.
So when I started visualVM, it was able to see my local java process
I had the same problem and running VisualVM with elevated privileges (admin rights) solved the issue.
On Linux with VisualVM 1.3.3 I have to remove local settings of application in ~/.visualvm/1.3.3/ to enable CPU Profiler and CPU Sampler.
Also note that /usr/bin/jvisualvm contains hardcoded path to OpenJDK (set with jdkhome variable), which seems to cause a lot of issues, comparing to running to Oracle JDK 1.7.
Also note that if your application is using a recent non-Oracle JVM, you may need to download the "bleeding edge" VisualVM from github.
For example, the VisualVM bundled with JDK 1.8.0.111 doesn't seem to work with the IBM 1.8 JVM. Possibly the IBM JVM was simply released after the Oracle 1.8 JVM, so including the necessary changes wasn't possible at that time.
Related
I wanted to monitor the JVM of wildfly running as service with jvisualvm/visualvm but I fail to do this. I tried the following things:
setting the %TMP% and %TEMP% to C:\Windows\Temp (wildfly console
tells me this for java.io.tmpdir)
running a console with sysinternals
pstools as system account: psexec -i -s cmd.exe and started visualvm
from within this new console (checked that the temp folders are
correctly set).
In both cases under local applications the process of wildfly was listed but visualvm only told me "not supported for this jvm".
As soon as I run wildfly from the cli, visualvm has no problems and shows me everything. There is only the jdk from oracle installed (with the corresponding jre).
How can I monitor the process of wildfly running as service (local system account)? Why is it not working with the solutions above?
Thanks a lot (for reading)
Thank you Salah
With your hint (local JMX connection) I've managed to make it work by using the following command for visualvm (no change of TMP/TEMP variables in cmd):
visualvm.exe -cp:a "<path-to-wildfly>\bin\client\jboss-client.jar"
and adding the path to the jmx console (don't forget to set the username/pw for the admin gui)
service:jmx:http-remoting-jmx://localhost:9990
Eclipse froze on me earlier today, so I typed "top" into the command prompt and killed it. Now when I try to run a java application, I get this error:
eclipse\plugins\org.eclipse.jdt.debug_3.7.0.v20110509
That's all that shows up under details.
None of my previously working programs run, and I have no clue what this is. I have Eclipse 1.5.0 running 1.6 and 1.7 Java, depending on what program. Thanks for any help.
It is possible that you killed part of the process but not all of it. It is possible that a java process is running with a reference to this job. I would try restarting your computer to see if it will stop whatever process is referencing that jar.
Aside from a restart, then another option would be to use (in linux) pstree, filtered for your user to see if any other jobs are referencing that jar and/or java.
EDIT:
Another path is to look at log files. On linux they are in /var/log. Here's a link in that direction: http://docs.oracle.com/javase/7/docs/webnotes/tsg/TSG-Desktop/html/felog.html
If I start a java process in a cygwin console, and then launch visualVm, the later cannot see the former.
If I start the same process in a Dos console visualvm sees it fine. I am in jdk1.6.0_25. This happens both in win7 32b, and in win7 64b with a 64b jvm.
Anyone can think of an explanation/workaround?
I fixed the problem by running VisualVM from within Cygwin. If you prefer not to profile using a remote JMX connection, you can run both VisualVM and your Java program using Cygwin:
Open the Cygwin Console window, navigate to visual_vm.exe and run that file from within the Cygwin environment.
I had the same problem. The vm was not shown automatically but I was able to connect via "Add JMX Connection", using hostname and jmx.remote.port...
On VisualVM go to File -> Add JMX Connection
localhost:3333
Add vm parameter at startup e.g.:
-Dcom.sun.management.jmxremote.port=3333
-Dcom.sun.management.jmxremote.ssl=false
-Dcom.sun.management.jmxremote.authenticate=false
VisualVM can automatically detect local applications running under the same user. So one explanation can be that cygwin process is running under the different user. Make sure that both VisualVM and monitored application is running under JDK 6 update 25. JDK 6 update 25 has a fix for the following JDK bug #6938627, which can affect your case.
The opposite approach to #seanhodges answer is to launch the application to debug with a modified environment, pointing it back to your Windows User Temp directory
For example if you normally do:
./gradlew run
And say your TEMP directory on Windows (according to your User environment variables) is:
T:\Temp
You can do one of these instead:
TMP=T:\\Temp ./gradlew run
TMP=/cygdrive/t/Temp ./gradlew run
(they both seem to work)
I am trying to run Tomcat 7 as a Windows Service (XP and Windows 7).
I see places to set the -Xmx and -Xms jvm args in catalina.bat, but I'm not sure how to do it when using $CATALINA_HOME/bin/service.bat install service-name. I looked around but the best I could find was that I needed to update windows registry key, though I'm not sure which one to edit.
I'm hoping there's an easier way, is there?
Update: I'm not using the windows installer mainly because I'm running multiple instances of tomcat on the same machine but with different ports (for reasons I'd rather not go into here). If I can use the installer with multiple instances using different ports, then I'd like to know how, but regardless, is it possible to do increase the memory on a tomcat windows service without the UI tools that come with the installer?
Assuming that you've downloaded and installed Tomcat as Windows Service Installer exe file from the Tomcat homepage, then check the Apache feather icon in the systray (or when absent, run Monitor Tomcat from the start menu). Doubleclick the feather icon and go to the Java tab. There you can configure the memory.
Restart the service to let the changes take effect.
The answer to my own question is, I think, to use tomcat7.exe:
cd $CATALINA_HOME
.\bin\service.bat install tomcat
.\bin\tomcat7.exe //US//tomcat7 --JvmMs=512 --JvmMx=1024 --JvmSs=1024
Also, you can launch the UI tool mentioned by BalusC without the system tray or using the installer with tomcat7w.exe
.\bin\tomcat7w.exe //ES//tomcat
An additional note to this:
Setting the --JvmXX parameters (through the UI tool or the command line) may not be enough. You may also need to specify the JVM memory values explicitly. From the command line it may look like this:
bin\tomcat7w.exe //US//tomcat7 --JavaOptions=-Xmx=1024;-Xms=512;..
Be careful not to override the other JavaOption values. You can try updating bin\service.bat or use the UI tool and append the java options (separate each value with a new line).
//ES/tomcat -> This may not work if you have changed the service name during the installation.
Either run the command without any service name
.\bin\tomcat7w.exe //ES
or with exact service name
.\bin\tomcat7w.exe //ES/YourServiceName
According to catalina.sh customizations should always go into your own setenv.sh (or setenv.bat respectively) eg:
CATALINA_OPTS='-Xms512m -Xmx1024m'
My guess is that setenv.bat will also be called when starting a service.I might be wrong, though, since I'm not a windows user.
If you are running a custom named service, you should see two executables in your Tomcat/bin directory
In my case with Tomcat 8
08/14/2019 10:24 PM 116,648 Tomcat-Custom.exe
08/14/2019 10:24 PM 119,720 Tomcat-Customw.exe
2 File(s) 236,368 bytes
Running the "w" terminated executable will let you configure Xmx in the Java tab
For Tomcat 7 to increase memory :
Identify your service name, you will find it in the service properties, under the "Path to executable" at the end of the line
For me it is //RS//Tomcat70 so the name is Tomcat70
Then write as administrator :
tomcat7.exe //US//Tomcat70 --JvmOptions=-Xmx1024M
I am attempting to have Tomcat, which is currently running as a service on a Windows 2003 box, dump heap on an OutOfMemoryError.
(Tomcat is running Hudson, which is reporting a heap space problem at the tail end of my build. Running the build manually produces no such error. The Hudson guys need a heap dump to get started.)
As instructed elsewhere, I've told the Apache Service Monitor to configure the JVM it uses to run Tomcat to dump heap when an OutOfMemoryError is encountered by adding the following to the JVM options:
-XX:+HeapDumpOnOutOfMemoryError
Then I run the build again. Sure enough, it reports there was a heap error. I scan the entire disk looking for the default java_pid123.hprof file (where obviously 123 is replaced by the PID of the JVM). No .hprof files exist anywhere.
I am caught in a catch 22: I need the heap dump for the Hudson guys to fix their memory leak, but I can't get the heap dump if I run Hudson under Tomcat.
Is there some special way, when Tomcat is running as a Windows service, to get a heap dump from it on an OutOfMemoryError?
The other thing I've tried is to tell it, on the Startup and Shutdown tabs, to use the "Java" option instead of the "jvm" option. I believe this should tell the Service Manager to attempt to start Tomcat with a Java executable command instead of launching the jvm.dll directly. When I do this, the service won't start.
Surely someone else has had a similar problem?
After finally putting this one to bed, I wanted to answer this for others who might have the same problem.
First, if you install Tomcat on Windows, do not use the .exe installer, even though it is promoted by Apache. It will not let you run Tomcat as anything other than the system account, no matter what you do. It appears that the system account does not have privileges to write .hprof files in the current directory, and no amount of Windows security tweaking appears to make this problem go away.
OK, so you've installed Tomcat from the .zip distribution. Install it as a service using the service.bat script. Make sure it is set to run as a specific user that you created specifically for this purpose. Make sure as well that the folder you want Tomcat to write to in the event of a heap dump is writable by that user.
Edit the service.bat file to include the -XX:+HeapDumpOnOutOfMemoryError and the -XX:HeapDumpPath=C:\whatever options in the correct place (where you can put JVM options). That should do the trick.
Have you tried -XX:HeapDumpPath option?
http://java.sun.com/javase/technologies/hotspot/vmoptions.jsp
I found the following link, which describes how to configure the tomcat service (includes setting the java parameters). Not sure if it applies to the version you are running.
http://tomcat.apache.org/tomcat-5.5-doc/windows-service-howto.html
When java process running as window service you can generate the heapdump using below steps,
Run the command console as Administrator
version of JDK (for jmap command) and JRE (Java app run environment) should be same.
Get the PID no of running window process for that java application from task manager
Execute below command
jmap -dump:file=d:\heapdump\myHeapDump.hprof -F #PID_No#
If got any exception with JDK/JRE 7 try the same with JDK/JRE 8
Actually I faced some issue in jmap with JDK 7, but when i moved to JDK 8, I were able to successfully generate the heap dump using same command
The .hprof files are dumped in the current directory. Exactly what that means for a windows service is anyone's guess, assuming it means anything.
I suggest posting a new question (on http://superuser.com) asking what "current directory" means for a windows service.
From 20 Tips for Using Tomcat in Production
Add the following to your JAVA_OPTS in catalina.sh (or catalina.bat for Windows): -XX:+HeapDumpOnOutOfMemoryError -XX:HeapDumpPath=/home/j2ee/heapdumps
if you have installed tomcat with .exe you can configure tomcat service to use account other than local system account and you can assign that user rights on directory "c:\whatever" where you are creating your dump file. one thing here to remember tomcat service don't run with account having administrative privileges. so create a simple user in windows(member of user group) and set tomcat services to user this account. and give that user rights on "c:\whatever" directory. This resolves the user directory rights issue but you have to configure tomcat for Memory dumps errors.