I 'm trying to use -XX:+UnlockDiagnosticVMOptions -XX:CompileCommand=print,*MyClass.myMethod
command lines as described in this post.
It seems thats it's available with open-jdk
(https://wikis.oracle.com/display/HotSpotInternals/PrintAssembly).
How can I use those options (or similar equivalents) with oracle JDK7 and the JVM HotSpot?
These instructions apply to Linux (Ubuntu 10.04.4 LTS), but should be applicable for your OS. After downloading Oracle JDK 7u3 and appropriately setting your JAVA_HOME
and PATH
environment variables, execute the following to check available options:
java -XX:+AggressiveOpts -XX:+UnlockDiagnosticVMOptions -XX:+UnlockExperimentalVMOptions -XX:+PrintFlagsFinal -version
You should see the UnlockDiagnosticVMOptions
, CompileCommand
and PrintAssembly
options are available. Using the CompileCommand
option will also enable the PrintAssembly
option. However, you will need the HotSpot disassembler plugin for PrintAssembly
to work; without it, you might see something like the following:
$ java -version
java version "1.7.0_03"
Java(TM) SE Runtime Environment (build 1.7.0_03-b04)
Java HotSpot(TM) Server VM (build 22.1-b02, mixed mode)
$ java -server -XX:+UnlockDiagnosticVMOptions '-XX:CompileCommand=print,*Main.main' Main
CompilerOracle: print *Main.main
Java HotSpot(TM) Server VM warning: printing of assembly code is enabled; turning on DebugNonSafepoints to gain additional output
Compiled method (c2) 68 1 % Main::main @ 4 (49 bytes)
total in heap [0xb3a97548,0xb3a979ec] = 1188
relocation [0xb3a97610,0xb3a97624] = 20
main code [0xb3a97640,0xb3a97840] = 512
stub code [0xb3a97840,0xb3a97850] = 16
oops [0xb3a97850,0xb3a97858] = 8
scopes data [0xb3a97858,0xb3a97898] = 64
scopes pcs [0xb3a97898,0xb3a979e8] = 336
dependencies [0xb3a979e8,0xb3a979ec] = 4
Could not load hsdis-i386.so; library not loadable; PrintAssembly is disabled
OopMapSet contains 1 OopMaps
To get the HotSpot disassembler plugin, you will need to build it. Looking at the OpenJDK 7u2 source, the hsdis plugin readme says:
To use the plugin with a JVM, you need a new version that can load it. If the product mode of your JVM does not accept -XX:+PrintAssembly, you do not have a version that is new enough.
To build this project you [need] a copy of GNU binutils to build against.
In theory this should be buildable on Windows but getting a working GNU build environment on Windows has proven difficult.
We have confirmed above that Oracle JDK 7u3 supports PrintAssembly
. I followed the hsdis plugin readme instructions, downloaded GNU binutils 2.22, placed it in the hsdis build/binutils
directory and ran make
. This eventually produced the following error:
hsdis.c:32:20: error: sysdep.h: No such file or directory
To correct this, I changed hsdis.c using the following patch:
diff -r 6259c6d3bbb7 src/share/tools/hsdis/hsdis.c
--- a/src/share/tools/hsdis/hsdis.c Mon Dec 12 23:08:01 2011 -0800
+++ b/src/share/tools/hsdis/hsdis.c Thu Feb 23 09:26:37 2012 -0500
@@ -29,7 +29,7 @@
#include "hsdis.h"
-#include <sysdep.h>
+#include <errno.h>
#include <libiberty.h>
#include <bfd.h>
#include <dis-asm.h>
Running make
was then successful. Now just copy the hsdis-i386.so
plugin in the hsdis build
directory to the Oracle JDK 7u3 jre/lib/i386
directory.
Now you can see the disassembled compiled code:
$ java -server -XX:+UnlockDiagnosticVMOptions '-XX:CompileCommand=print,*Main.main' Main
CompilerOracle: print *Main.main
Java HotSpot(TM) Server VM warning: printing of assembly code is enabled; turning on DebugNonSafepoints to gain additional output
Compiled method (c2) 68 1 % Main::main @ 4 (49 bytes)
total in heap [0xb3999548,0xb39999ec] = 1188
relocation [0xb3999610,0xb3999624] = 20
main code [0xb3999640,0xb3999840] = 512
stub code [0xb3999840,0xb3999850] = 16
oops [0xb3999850,0xb3999858] = 8
scopes data [0xb3999858,0xb3999898] = 64
scopes pcs [0xb3999898,0xb39999e8] = 336
dependencies [0xb39999e8,0xb39999ec] = 4
Loaded disassembler from [snip]/jdk1.7.0_03/jre/lib/i386/hsdis-i386.so
Decoding compiled method 0xb3999548:
Code:
[Disassembling for mach='i386']
[Entry Point]
[Verified Entry Point]
[Constants]
# {method} 'main' '([Ljava/lang/String;)V' in 'Main'
0xb3999640: call 0xb6ff8510 ; {runtime_call}
0xb3999645: data32 xchg %ax,%ax
0xb3999648: mov %eax,-0x3000(%esp)
0xb399964f: push %ebp
0xb3999650: sub $0x38,%esp
0xb3999656: mov %ecx,%esi
0xb3999658: mov 0x4(%esi),%ebp
0xb399965b: mov 0x8(%esi),%edi
0xb399965e: mov (%ecx),%esi
0xb3999660: mov %ecx,(%esp)
0xb3999663: call 0xb7078cf0 ;*iload_3
[snip]
0xb399983e: hlt
0xb399983f: hlt
[Exception Handler]
[Stub Code]
0xb3999840: jmp 0xb39981e0 ; {no_reloc}
[Deopt Handler Code]
0xb3999845: push $0xb3999845 ; {section_word}
0xb399984a: jmp 0xb397e220 ; {runtime_call}
0xb399984f: .byte 0x0
OopMapSet contains 1 OopMaps
#0
OopMap{off=468}
The test class I've used is:
public class Main {
public static void main(final String[] args) {
long x = 0;
for (int i = 0; i < 1000000; i++) {
x += calculate(i);
}
System.out.println("x=" + x);
}
private static long calculate(final int i) {
return (long)i * (long)i;
}
}
in my case to see the disassembled compiled code:
$ java -XX:CompileThreshold=1 -XX:+UnlockDiagnosticVMOptions -XX:+PrintAssembly -XX:CompileCommand="compileonly pac/kage/MyClass myMethod" MyClass
in example above has is cycle: for (int i = 0; i < 1 000 000; i++) {...}
,
that is why in our case without 1 000 000 iterations we need -XX:CompileThreshold=1
option (by default 10 000 for -server) to see our disassembled compiled code.
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/9341083/how-to-use-xxunlockdiagnosticvmoptions-xxcompilecommand-print-option-with-j