How to monitor Java memory usage?

混江龙づ霸主 提交于 2019-11-26 15:48:05
amischiefr

If you want to really look at what is going on in the VM memory you should use a good tool like VisualVM. This software is free and it's a great way to see what is going on.

Nothing is really "wrong" with explicit gc() calls. However, remember that when you call gc() you are "suggesting" that the garbage collector run. There is no guarantee that it will run at the exact time you run that command.

Mr. Shiny and New 安宇

There are tools that let you monitor the VM's memory usage. The VM can expose memory statistics using JMX. You can also print GC statistics to see how the memory is performing over time.

Invoking System.gc() can harm the GC's performance because objects will be prematurely moved from the new to old generations, and weak references will be cleared prematurely. This can result in decreased memory efficiency, longer GC times, and decreased cache hits (for caches that use weak refs). I agree with your consultant: System.gc() is bad. I'd go as far as to disable it using the command line switch.

You can take a look at stagemonitor. It is a open source java (web) application performance monitor. It captures response time metrics, JVM metrics, request details (including a call stack captured by the request profiler) and more. The overhead is very low.

Optionally, you can use the great timeseries database graphite with it to store a long history of datapoints that you can look at with fancy dashboards.

Example:

Take a look at the project website to see screenshots, feature descriptions and documentation.

Note: I am the developer of stagemonitor

I would say that the consultant is right in the theory, and you are right in practice. As the saying goes:

In theory, theory and practice are the same. In practice, they are not.

The Java spec says that System.gc suggests to call garbage collection. In practice, it just spawns a thread and runs right away on the Sun JVM.

Although in theory you could be messing up some finely tuned JVM implementation of garbage collection, unless you are writing generic code intended to be deployed on any JVM out there, don't worry about it. If it works for you, do it.

Peek into what is happening inside tomcat through Visual VM. http://www.skill-guru.com/blog/2010/10/05/increasing-permgen-size-in-your-server/

Take a look at the JVM args: http://java.sun.com/javase/technologies/hotspot/vmoptions.jsp#DebuggingOptions

XX:-PrintGC Print messages at garbage collection. Manageable.

-XX:-PrintGCDetails Print more details at garbage collection. Manageable. (Introduced in 1.4.0.)

-XX:-PrintGCTimeStamps Print timestamps at garbage collection. Manageable (Introduced in 1.4.0.)

-XX:-PrintTenuringDistribution Print tenuring age information.

While you're not going to upset the JVM with explicit calls to System.gc() they may not have the effect you are expecting. To really understand what's going on with the memory in a JVM with read anything and everything the Brian Goetz writes.

Explicitly running System.gc() on a production system is a terrible idea. If the memory gets to any size at all, the entire system can freeze while a full GC is running. On a multi-gigabyte-sized server, this can easily be very noticeable, depending on how the jvm is configured, and how much headroom it has, etc etc - I've seen pauses of more than 30 seconds.

Another issue is that by explicitly calling GC you're not actually monitoring how the JVM is running the GC, you're actually altering it - depending on how you've configured the JVM, it's going to garbage collect when appropriate, and usually incrementally (It doesn't just run a full GC when it runs out of memory). What you'll be printing out will be nothing like what the JVM will do on it's own - for one thing you'll probably see fewer automatic / incremental GC's as you'll be clearing the memory manually.

As Nick Holt's post points out, options to print GC activity already exist as JVM flags.

You could have a thread that just prints out free and available at reasonable intervals, this will show you actual mem useage.

If you like a nice way to do this from the command line use jstat:

http://java.sun.com/j2se/1.5.0/docs/tooldocs/share/jstat.html

It gives raw information at configurable intervals which is very useful for logging and graphing purposes.

If you use java 1.5, you can look at ManagementFactory.getMemoryMXBean() which give you numbers on all kinds of memory. heap and non-heap, perm-gen.

A good example can be found there http://www.freshblurbs.com/explaining-java-lang-outofmemoryerror-permgen-space

If you use the JMX provided history of GC runs you can use the same before/after numbers, you just dont have to force a GC.

You just need to keep in mind that those GC runs (typically one for old and one for new generation) are not on regular intervalls, so you need to extract the starttime as well for plotting (or you plot against a sequence number, for most practical purposes that would be enough for plotting).

For example on Oracle HotSpot VM with ParNewGC, there is a JMX MBean called java.lang:type=GarbageCollector,name=PS Scavenge, it has a attribute LastGCInfo, it returns a CompositeData of the last YG scavenger run. It is recorded with duration, absolute startTime and memoryUsageBefore and memoryUsageAfter.

Just use a timer to read that attribute. Whenever a new startTime shows up you know that it describes a new GC event, you extract the memory information and keep polling for the next update. (Not sure if a AttributeChangeNotification somehow can be used.)

Tip: in your timer you might measure the distance to the last GC run, and if that is too long for the resulution of your plotting, you could invoke System.gc() conditionally. But I would not do that in a OLTP instance.

As has been suggested, try VisualVM to get a basic view.

You can also use Eclipse MAT, to do a more detailed memory analysis.

It's ok to do a System.gc() as long as you dont depend on it, for the correctness of your program.

The problem with system.gc, is that the JVM already automatically allocates time to the garbage collector based on memory usage.

However, if you are, for instance, working in a very memory limited condition, like a mobile device, System.gc allows you to manually allocate more time towards this garbage collection, but at the cost of cpu time (but, as you said, you aren't that concerned about performance issues of gc).

Best practice would probably be to only use it where you might be doing large amounts of deallocation (like flushing a large array).

All considered, since you are simply concerned about memory usage, feel free to call gc, or, better yet, see if it makes much of a memory difference in your case, and then decide.

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