I have got a jvm process that constantly consumes single cpu core. I checked java threads and there seems to be no running operations, so it seems that load is from native thread.
I tried to use pstack: pstack <thread_id>
, but it returned me list of addresses which is not very helpful:
#0 0x00007fcc33c2b694 in ?? ()
#1 0x00007fcc3011f540 in ?? ()
#2 0x00007fcc2c032710 in ?? ()
#3 0x00007fcc3011f560 in ?? ()
#4 0x00007fcc33c6eaa0 in ?? ()
#5 0x00007fcc3011f560 in ?? ()
#6 0x00007fcc3011f7f0 in ?? ()
#7 0x00007fcc346414d0 in ?? ()
#8 0x00007fcc34641bf8 in ?? ()
#9 0x00007fcc3011f570 in ?? ()
#10 0x00007fcc33c83618 in ?? ()
#11 0x00007fcc3011f5a0 in ?? ()
#12 0x00007fcc33c6ea66 in ?? ()
#13 0x00000006b73ce4b0 in ?? ()
#14 0x00007fcc3011f7f0 in ?? ()
What can I do next? As I understand that could be helpful to use symbols to convert adddresses to readable names, but I am not sure if they exist for jvm.
Another option is to ask jvm to print internal state, but I am not sure if such commands exist.
Any information is appreciated.
I am using 1.7.0_80 jdk:
# ./java -version
java version "1.7.0_80"
Java(TM) SE Runtime Environment (build 1.7.0_80-b15)
Java HotSpot(TM) 64-Bit Server VM (build 24.80-b11, mixed mode)
within docker (1.9.1) container:
# uname -a
Linux 259307ada273 3.10.0-229.el7.x86_64 #1 SMP Fri Mar 6 11:36:42 UTC 2015 x86_64 x86_64 x86_64 GNU/Linux