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I am working on very huge java web based application. As there is no proper logging done while development so its very difficult for me to put break point and debug the app as i dont know execution order. Is there any mechanism to get complete Call Stack of the the running java application after I perform some actions.

I searched it on net for long time but cannot came to concrete solution. Please suggest me if something is there for it. Thanks

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7 Answers 7

23

Method 1: Use jstack utility from command line (part of the JDK distro).

Method 2: Send signal 3 to the java process, it will dump stack traces on stdout.

Method 3: Call Thread.getAllStackTraces () from within application:

public class StackTraceDumper
{
    public static dumpAllStackTraces ()
    {
        for (Map.Entry <Thread, StackTraceElement []> entry: 
            Thread.getAllStackTraces().entrySet ())
        {
            System.out.println (entry.getKey ().getName () + ":");
            for (StackTraceElement element: entry.getValue ())
                System.out.println ("\t" + element);
        }
    }
}

Then use StackTraceDumper.dumpAllStackTraces() where you need to dump stack traces.

2
  • Can u please suggest me where to write this stackTrace() code snippet?? I want to write a single code snippet that can be used everywhere.
    – naeemgik
    Feb 5, 2013 at 10:55
  • jstack does not ship as part of the JRE (at least not in version 7) it does however ship as part of the JDK. Nov 4, 2014 at 16:49
6

Thread.dumpStack() Prints a stack trace of the current thread to the standard error stream. Thread.getAllStackTraces() Returns a map of stack traces for all live threads. Thread.getStackTrace() Returns an array of stack trace elements representing the stack dump of this thread.

1
  • Can u please suggest me where to write this stackTrace() code snippet?? I want to write a single code snippet that can be used everywhere
    – naeemgik
    Feb 5, 2013 at 11:00
5

Have a look at Throwable.getStackTrace(). Just create a new Throwable; you don't actually have to throw it.

1
  • This will dump stack trace for one thread only, the current thread. Feb 5, 2013 at 10:47
3

You can trigger a stack dump via pressing Ctrl+Break, or sending a signal 3 (on Unix-based systems). Note that you'll get a stack trace per-thread. This will go to standard error, so make sure your logging is capturing this.

You can do this programatically via

Map<Thread, StackTraceElement[]> m = Thread.getAllStackTraces();

Here's more info on getting and analysing stack traces.

As you've noted, BTrace is another possibility. Here's an SO answer on using it.

3
  • I want to find complete call stack when i perform some action from the application button e.g. (on Register Patient). Do u know about BTrace what is it :(???
    – naeemgik
    Feb 5, 2013 at 10:40
  • I can't really advise other than to refer you to an SO answer (see above) Feb 5, 2013 at 10:42
  • Can u please suggest me where to write this stackTrace() code snippet?? I want to write a single code snippet that can be used everywhere.
    – naeemgik
    Feb 5, 2013 at 10:53
0

There are some options:

  • Run it in a debugger, and pause all threads, then you can inspect them
  • Use VisualVM to connect to the running processes and trigger a thread dump. It comes with the JDK.
  • Use jstack on the command line, to dump threads.

Add some basic logging to your code:

new RuntimeException().printStackTrace();

That will pring a static trace to stderr

2
  • 1
    This will print stack trace for one thread only, the current thread. Feb 5, 2013 at 10:45
  • Yes, the code line print the current thread. The other examples will print all thread stacks. Feb 5, 2013 at 10:53
0

Why don't you use some AOP tool like AspectJ to capture these values and log? You can use execution() point cut along with after() advice. For non production deployment you can log all the method calls along with passed values and returned value. This will be too much overhead for production env. For that you can just store the passed values (Object args[] as you get in AspectJ advice) in local variable and only log it in case of exception. But even in that case there will be some performance penalty as primitive values will be boxed to be passed as Object[] to your advice.

0

Just in case people are reading this post to find out how to get the class or classes of the stack of the current thread:

StackTraceElement[] stack = Thread.currentThread().getStackTrace();
String smallStack = "Calling classes: " + System.lineSeparator() + stack[2] + System.lineSeparator() + stack[3];

This will get the stack for the current thread.

  • stack[0] will be the getStackTrace call itself.
  • stack[1] will be the line of code where you are working.
  • So stack[2] and stack[3] are the first 'interesting' stack elements.

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