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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
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  • 2
    can you profile your process? 10 seconds snapshot will be enough to detect if there's a method that is constantly running Jan 28, 2016 at 11:26

3 Answers 3

2

You can try to activate CPU profiling in jvisualvm, see https://visualvm.java.net/profiler.html.

2

The best free tool which comes with the JVM is Flight Recorder in Mission Control i.e. jmc It has much lower overhead, and generally finer detail including the location of object allocations.

If you have high CPU usage, I usually start with object allocation first as this usually yields the quick wins. Only after the allocation rates have been cleaned up do I look at the CPU profiling.

Java 8 has a better version of Mission Control 5.5, though Java 7 still works ok.

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pstack requires symbols, for JITed code they are not available. You can use jstack instead which acquires the necessary information at runtime.

Besides java-specific profilers - such as jmc, jprofiler or yourkit - linux perf tools are also an option since they can be use perf-map-agent to obtain symbols.

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