158

I was reading a book on programming skills wherein the author asks the interviewee, "How do you crash a JVM?" I thought that you could do so by writing an infinite for-loop that would eventually use up all the memory.

Anybody has any idea?

2

27 Answers 27

181

I wouldn't call throwing an OutOfMemoryError or StackOverflowError a crash. These are just normal exceptions. To really crash a VM there are 3 ways:

  1. Use JNI and crash in the native code.
  2. If no security manager is installed you can use reflection to crash the VM. This is VM specific, but normally a VM stores a bunch of pointers to native resources in private fields (e.g. a pointer to the native thread object is stored in a long field in java.lang.Thread). Just change them via reflection and the VM will crash sooner or later.
  3. All VMs have bugs, so you just have to trigger one.

For the last method I have a short example, which will crash a Sun Hotspot VM quiet nicely:

public class Crash {
    public static void main(String[] args) {
        Object[] o = null;

        while (true) {
            o = new Object[] {o};
        }
    }
}

This leads to a stack overflow in the GC so you will get no StackOverflowError but a real crash including a hs_err* file.

7
  • 9
    Wow! This crashes Sun Java 5, Sun Java 6 and OpenJDK 6 (on Ubuntu 9.04) with no hs_err* file but only a "Segmentation fault!" ... Sep 4, 2009 at 10:25
  • 1
    System.exit() is a much easier way to crash a JVM (unless a security manager is installed) Aug 18, 2010 at 5:05
  • 4
    Don't know when it was fixed, but just tested in 1.7.0_09 and it is fine. Just got the expected: Exception in thread "main"java.lang.OutOfMemoryError: Java heap space at CrashJVM.main(CrashJVM.java:7)
    – Chad N B
    Nov 29, 2012 at 6:59
  • 2
    I tried the code above on Intel Core i7 2.4 GHz/8 GB RAM/JDK1.7 64bit but JVM still up after 20 minutes. (Funny: My laptop fan was louder than a fighter jet in the sky). Is this issue fixed in JDK 1.7+?
    – realPK
    Feb 24, 2014 at 6:27
  • 4
    In JDK 1.8_u71 this causes a java.lang.OutOfMemoryError: GC overhead limit exceeded
    – Clashsoft
    Jan 24, 2016 at 20:35
130

JNI. In fact, with JNI, crashing is the default mode of operation. You have to work extra hard to get it not to crash.

1
67

Use this:

import sun.misc.Unsafe;

public class Crash {
    private static final Unsafe unsafe = Unsafe.getUnsafe();
    public static void crash() {
        unsafe.putAddress(0, 0);
    }
    public static void main(String[] args) {
        crash();
    }
}

This class must be on the boot classpath because it is using trusted code,so run like this:

java -Xbootclasspath/p:. Crash

EDIT: Simplified version with pushy's suggestion:

Field f = Unsafe.class.getDeclaredField("theUnsafe");
f.setAccessible(true);
Unsafe unsafe = (Unsafe) f.get(null);
unsafe.putAddress(0, 0);
6
  • 18
    Instead of using -Xbootclasspath you can also just do this: Field f = Unsafe.class.getDeclaredField( "theUnsafe" ); f.setAccessible( true ); unsafe = (Unsafe) f.get( null ); Worked great for me.
    – pushy
    Feb 6, 2014 at 11:50
  • Unsafe is, by definition, "unsafe". This is a bit of a cheat.
    – Hot Licks
    Feb 21, 2017 at 12:51
  • 2
    Confirmed working using getDeclaredField trick in JDK 8u131 on Linux x64, including production of hs_err_pid*.log from a SIGSEGV. Aug 18, 2017 at 13:00
  • 3
    Using Unsafe is not a cheat. OP is not looking for a 'clean' solution to a programming problem. He needs the jvm to crash in the ugliest possible way. Doing nasty native things is what can make that happen, and it is exactly what Unsafe does.
    – jvdneste
    Sep 20, 2017 at 11:04
  • 1
    Very happy to report that this still works as advertised in 2021. I needed a way to generate hs_err.pid files to make sure my cloud infra was copying them correctly. One four-line function was all it took!
    – Stevey
    May 18, 2021 at 1:26
38

I came here because I also ran into this question in The Passionate Programmer, by Chad Fowler. For those who don't have access to a copy, the question is framed as a kind of filter/test for candidates interviewing for a position requiring "really good Java programmers."

Specifically, he asks:

How would you write a program, in pure Java, that would cause the Java Virtual Machine to crash?

I've programmed in Java for over 15 years, and I found this question to be both puzzling and unfair. As others have pointed out, Java, as a managed language, is specifically designed not to crash. Of course there are always JVM bugs, but:

  1. After 15+ years of production-level JREs, it's rare.
  2. Any such bugs are likely to be patched in the next release, so how likely are you as a programmer to run into and recall the details of the current set of JRE show-stoppers?

As others have mentioned, some native code via JNI is a sure way to crash a JRE. But the author specifically mentioned in pure Java, so that's out.

Another option would be to feed the JRE bogus byte codes; it's easy enough to dump some garbage binary data to a .class file, and ask the JRE to run it:

$ echo 'crap crap crap' > crap.class
$ java crap
Exception in thread "main" java.lang.ClassFormatError: Incompatible magic value 1668440432 in class file crap

Does that count? I mean the JRE itself hasn't crashed; it properly detected the bogus code, reported it, and exited.

This leaves us with the most obvious kinds of solutions such as blowing the stack via recursion, running out of heap memory via object allocations, or simply throwing RuntimeException. But this just causes the JRE to exit with a StackOverflowError or similar exception, which, again is not really a crash.

So what's left? I'd really love to hear what the author really had in mind as a proper solution.

Update: Chad Fowler responded here.

PS: it's an otherwise great book. I picked it up for moral support while learning Ruby.

3
  • 1
    Such interview questions serve as litmus tests for Java developers that have been around long enough to 1) have witnessed (many) JVM crashes and 2) have drawn some conclusions or, better yet, as (self-proclaimed) Java experts have tried understanding the underlying reasons for a crash. Chad Fowler also states in his book that self-proclaimed Java programmers "couldn't even come up with the wrong answer", i.e. haven't tried thinking about when a whole class of potential problems. The bottom line: this question is segway to "How to prevent JVM crashes?" which is clearly even better to know.
    – Shonzilla
    Oct 27, 2012 at 13:14
  • 1
    I would look for people who just answer (as most here did) "overflow the stack", system.exit(), or other "Normal" shutdown as they do not really understand the JVM or the word "Crash". To recognize (as you did) that this is very abnormal is a pretty good way to identify a more advanced programmer. I do agree with your first statement, I'd find it an excellent and totally fair question to ask or be asked--the ones without concrete answers are always the best.
    – Bill K
    Sep 9, 2015 at 18:10
  • late to the party, but a bytecode approach sounds resonable: if you can manage to spoon-feed the vm JITTER code, you sure can crash it by fiddling around with registers or stuff like that
    – clockw0rk
    Jan 19, 2021 at 15:42
22

Last time I tried this would do it:

public class Recur {
    public static void main(String[] argv) {
        try {
            recur();
        }
        catch (Error e) {
            System.out.println(e.toString());
        }
        System.out.println("Ended normally");
    }
    static void recur() {
        Object[] o = null;
        try {
            while(true) {
                Object[] newO = new Object[1];
                newO[0] = o;
                o = newO;
            }
        }
        finally {
            recur();
        }
    }
}

First part of generated log file:

#
# An unexpected error has been detected by Java Runtime Environment:
#
#  EXCEPTION_STACK_OVERFLOW (0xc00000fd) at pc=0x000000006dad5c3d, pid=6752, tid=1996
#
# Java VM: Java HotSpot(TM) 64-Bit Server VM (11.2-b01 mixed mode windows-amd64)
# Problematic frame:
# V  [jvm.dll+0x2e5c3d]
#
# If you would like to submit a bug report, please visit:
#   http://java.sun.com/webapps/bugreport/crash.jsp
#

---------------  T H R E A D  ---------------

Current thread (0x00000000014c6000):  VMThread [stack: 0x0000000049810000,0x0000000049910000] [id=1996]

siginfo: ExceptionCode=0xc00000fd, ExceptionInformation=0x0000000000000001 0x0000000049813fe8 

Registers:
EAX=0x000000006dc83090, EBX=0x000000003680f400, ECX=0x0000000005d40ce8, EDX=0x000000003680f400
ESP=0x0000000049813ff0, EBP=0x00000000013f2df0, ESI=0x00000000013f0e40, EDI=0x000000003680f400
EIP=0x000000006dad5c3d, EFLAGS=0x0000000000010206
7
  • 1
    I'm a little amused at the downvote, given that this is one of the only two answers showing how to do it purely with Java code, and includes the complete code.
    – Hot Licks
    Mar 7, 2015 at 18:50
  • I agree that a downvote is unwarranted--this is a true crash, but how would you respond to the interview question. Unless you had previously researched and memorized this you couldn't give it as an answer in the interview and if you could I would consider a neutral to poor answer anyway--it doesn't show how you'd approach the problem. I expect what you did was google for jvm bug exploits and implement one which is an excellent answer.
    – Bill K
    Sep 9, 2015 at 18:15
  • @BillK - No, the above is entirely my own work, though I came up with it several years ago, experimenting with various things. In an interview I'd likely say "I've done it, using try/catch and recursion, but I can't rattle off the exact code just now."
    – Hot Licks
    Sep 9, 2015 at 18:22
  • 1
    What are the details (JDK version, any VM arguments)? Not sure what version "11.2-b0" is. I'm running this, but it only consumes a lot of CPU. Aug 29, 2016 at 13:16
  • 1
    Isn’t this just a variant of this answer, provoking a stack overflow in the GC due to deeply linked Object[] instances? I’m not sure whether the recursion and finally part add anything to the crash’s actual cause…
    – Holger
    Apr 6, 2017 at 12:17
20

This code will crash the JVM in nasty ways

import sun.dc.pr.PathDasher; 

public class Crash
{
     public static void main(String[] args)
     {    
        PathDasher dasher = new PathDasher(null) ;
     }
}
2
  • 1
    Getting compile error when using JDK 1.7 with this code: Access restriction: The type PathDasher is not accessible due to restriction on required library C:\Program Files\Java\jdk1.7.0_51\jre\lib\rt.jar
    – realPK
    Feb 24, 2014 at 6:30
  • 7
    This throws an InternalError in JDK 1.8. JVM no longer fails. Jul 31, 2014 at 5:18
16

A perfect JVM implementation will never crash.

To crash a JVM, aside from JNI, you need to find a bug in the VM itself. An infinite loop just consumes CPU. Infinitely allocating memory should just cause OutOfMemoryError's in a well built JVM. This would probably cause problems for other threads, but a good JVM still should not crash.

If you can find a bug in the source code of the VM, and for example cause a segmentation fault in the memory usage of the implementation of the VM, then you can actually crash it.

14

If you want to crash JVM - use the following in Sun JDK 1.6_23 or below:

Double.parseDouble("2.2250738585072012e-308");

This is due to a bug in Sun JDK - also found in OpenJDK. This is fixed from Oracle JDK 1.6_24 onwards.

10

Depends on what you mean by crash.

You can do an infinite recursion to make it run out of stack space, but that'll crash "gracefully". You'll get an exception, but the JVM itself will be handling everything.

You can also use JNI to call native code. If you don't do it just right then you can make it crash hard. Debugging those crashes is "fun" (trust me, I had to write a big C++ DLL that we call from a signed java applet). :)

8

The closest thing to a single "answer" is System.exit() which terminates the JVM immediately without proper cleanup. But apart from that, native code and resource exhaustion are the most likely answers. Alternatively you can go looking on Sun's bug tracker for bugs in your version of the JVM, some of which allow for repeatable crash scenarios. We used to get semi-regular crashes when approaching the 4 Gb memory limit under the 32-bit versions (we generally use 64-bit now).

4
  • 73
    without proper cleanup? are you sure? The documentation says "Terminates the currently running Java virtual machine by initiating its shutdown sequence ... all registered shutdown hooks, if any, are started ... all uninvoked finalizers are run" - isn't that the proper cleanup?
    – user85421
    Apr 29, 2009 at 13:10
  • 52
    This isn't crashing the JVM, it's purposefully and explicitly beginning an orderly shut-down of execution.
    – BenM
    May 17, 2010 at 14:04
  • 10
    Closer to crashing the jvm is Runtime.getRuntime().halt( status ). According to the docs "this method does not cause shutdown hooks to be started and does not run uninvoked finalizers if finalization-on-exit has been enabled". Still not a crash, but closer than System.exit.
    – henry
    Apr 18, 2012 at 12:01
  • 50
    This is really a bad answer.
    – Antonio
    Aug 1, 2012 at 17:59
6

The book Java Virtual Machine by Jon Meyer has an example of a series of bytecode instructions that caused the JVM to core dump. I can't find my copy of this book. If anyone out there has one please look it up and post the answer.

5

on winxpsp2 w/wmp10 jre6.0_7

Desktop.open(uriToAviOrMpgFile)

This causes a spawned thread to throw an uncaught Throwable and crashes hotspot

YMMV

5

Broken hardware can crash any program. I once had an app crash reproducably on a specific machine while running fine on other machines with the exact same setup. Turns out that machine had faulty RAM.

2
  • how do you ensure your process lands on the same page adress every time it runs? this answere is like saying "if a tsunami hits your village, your code surely crashes"
    – clockw0rk
    Jan 19, 2021 at 15:45
  • @clockw0rk: if the faulty memory is near the beginning of the address space, and your program uses a lot of memory, you have a very good chance of hitting it. Especially since it's usually not just a single byte that doesn't work properly. Jan 19, 2021 at 16:20
5

shortest possible way :)

public class Crash
{
    public static void main(String[] args)
    {
        main(args);
    }
}
2
  • Doesn't crash. It gives compile time error Exception in thread "main" java.lang.StackOverflowError at Test.main. I am using jdk1.8.0_65 Jun 5, 2016 at 20:49
  • 2
    @QuaziIrfan That's a runtime error, not a compile time error!
    – Daniel
    Dec 12, 2021 at 20:26
5

Not a crash, but closer to a crash than the accepted answer of using System.exit

You can halt the JVM by calling

Runtime.getRuntime().halt( status )

According to the docs :-

"this method does not cause shutdown hooks to be started and does not run uninvoked finalizers if finalization-on-exit has been enabled".

0
4

here is a detailed explanation on what causes JVM to core dump (i.e. crash): http://kb.adobe.com/selfservice/viewContent.do?externalId=tn_17534

4

If you want to pretend you have run out of memory you can do

public static void main(String[] args) {
    throw new OutOfmemoryError();
}

I know a couple of way to cause the JVM dump an error file by calling native methods (ones which are built in), but its probably best you not know how to do this. ;)

4

If you define a crash as an process abort because of a unhandled situation (i.e. no Java Exception or Error), then this can not be done from within Java (unless you have permission to use the sun.misc.Unsafe class). This the whole point of managed code.

Typical crashes in native code happen by de-referencing pointers to wrong memory areas (null address or missaligned). Another source could be illegal machine instructions (opcodes) or unhandled signals from library or kernel calls. Both can be triggered if the JVM or the system libraries have bugs.

For example JITed (generated) code, native methods or system calls (graphics driver) can have problems leading to real crashes (it was quite common to get a crash when you used ZIP functions and they ran out of memory). In those cases the crash handler of the JVM kicks in and dumps the state. It could also generate a OS core file (Dr. Watson on Windows and core dump on *nix).

On Linux/Unix you can easyly make a JVM crash by sending it a Signal to the running process. Note: you should not use SIGSEGV for this, since Hotspot catches this signal and re-throws it as a NullPointerException in most places. So it is better to send a SIGBUS for example.

3

JNI is a large source of crashes. You can also crash using the JVMTI interface since that needs to be written in C/C++ as well.

3

If you create a thread process that infinitely spawns more threads (which spawn more threads, which...) you'll eventually cause a stack overflow error in the JVM itself.

public class Crash {
    public static void main(String[] args) {

        Runnable[] arr = new Runnable[1];
        arr[0] = () -> {

            while (true) {
                new Thread(arr[0]).start();
            }
        };

        arr[0].run();
    }
}

This gave me the output (after 5 minutes, watch your ram)

An unrecoverable stack overflow has occurred.
#
# A fatal error has been detected by the Java Runtime Environment:
#
#  EXCEPTION_STACK_OVERFLOW (0xc00000fd) at pc=0x0000000070e53ed7, pid=12840, tid=0x0000000000101078
#
# JRE version: Java(TM) SE Runtime Environment (8.0_144-b01) (build 1.8.0_144-b01)
# Java VM: Java HotSpot(TM) 64-Bit Server VM (25.144-b01 mixed mode windows-amd64 compressed oops)
# Problematic frame:
# 
1
  • if you did this using processes, you'd at some point crash the computer. you can do by using runtime exec ( "a .bat file that calls your JAR" ) -> jar opens 2 new runtime execs() in it's constructor -> neat fork bomb, throw in a swing element and you have the classic 90's hacker feeling lulz
    – clockw0rk
    Jan 19, 2021 at 15:49
3

If by "crash" you mean an abrupt abort of the JVM, such as would cause the JVM to write out to its hs_err_pid%p.log, you can do it this way.

Set the-Xmx arg to a tiny value and tell the JVM to force a crash on outofmemory:

 -Xmx10m -XX:+CrashOnOutOfMemoryError

To be clear, without the second arg above, it would just result in the jvm terminating with an OutOfMemoryError, but it would not "crash" or abruptly abort the jvm.

This technique proved helpful when I was trying to test the JVM -XX:ErrorFile arg, which controls where such an hs_err_pid log should be written. I had found this post here, while trying to find ways to force such a crash. When I later found the above worked as the easiest for my need, I wanted to add it to the list here.

Finally, FWIW, if anyone may test this when they already have an -Xms value set in your args (to some larger value than above), you'll want to remove or change that also, or you will get not a crash but simply a failure of the jvm to start, reporting "Initial heap size set to a larger value than the maximum heap size". (That wouldn't be obvious if running the JVM as service, such as with some app servers. Again, it bit me, so I wanted to share it.)

2
  • it works for testing JVM -XX:ErrorFile arg @Charlie
    – Sandy
    Aug 1, 2020 at 11:17
  • I can't tell: Sandy, is your comment just adding confirmation to what I'd said, how "this technique proved helpful when I was trying to test the JVM -XX:ErrorFile arg"? If so, thanks. If perhaps you thought I was questioning if it would "work" for testing that, I was not. :-) Aug 7, 2020 at 13:59
1

Shortest? Use Robot class to trigger CTRL+BREAK. I spotted this when I was trying to close my program without closing console (It had no 'exit' functionality).

2
  • Old question - hopefully someone benefits from your answer in future.
    – dbmitch
    Jun 25, 2016 at 17:57
  • i love this <3 how about a robot that writes in it's source code, then compiles and runs itself and terminates. let's call it "self-mutating-robot"
    – clockw0rk
    Jan 19, 2021 at 15:50
1

Does this count ?

long pid = ProcessHandle.current().pid();
try { Runtime.getRuntime().exec("kill -9 "+pid); } catch (Exception e) {}

It only works for Linux and from Java 9.

For some reason I don't get, ProcessHandle.current().destroyForcibly(); doesn't kill the JVM and throws java.lang.IllegalStateException with the message destroy of current process not allowed.

1

Running into this issue when trying to replicate the JVM crash.

Jni works, but it needs to be tweaked for different platforms. Eventually, I use this combination to make JVM crash

  1. Start the application with this JVM options -XX:+CrashOnOutOfMemoryError
  2. Use a long[] l = new long[Integer.MAX_VALUE]; to trigger the OOM

Then JVM will crash and generate the crash log.

2
  • Not correct, because this will lead to an OOM and not to crash.
    – Daniel
    Dec 12, 2021 at 20:23
  • For me it's a crash and it outputs a hs_err_pid<PID>.log file
    – golimar
    May 24, 2022 at 10:57
0

If you change that infinite for loop to a recursive call to the same function, then you would get a stack overflow exception:

public static void main(String[] args) {
    causeStackOverflow();
}

public void causeStackOverflow() {
    causeStackOverflow();
}
0

I'm doing it now, but not entirely sure how... :-) JVM (and my app) sometimes just completely disappear. No errors thrown, nothing logged. Goes from working to not running at all instantly with no warning.

2
  • Start checking your hardware, especially you memory! Oct 30, 2009 at 13:44
  • Unfortunately, it's on multiple machines that otherwise run just fine. It's only this one particular app that does it (and it's not memory or processor intensive). Oct 30, 2009 at 14:18
-2

If a 'Crash' is anything that interrupts the jvm/program from normal termination, then an Un-handled exception could do this.

public static void main(String args[]){
   int i = 1/0;
   System.out.print(i); // This part will not be executed due to above  unhandled exception
  }

So, it depends on what type of CRASH ?!

2
  • 4
    Throwing an exception isn't a crash. Jun 5, 2016 at 20:51
  • Unhandled runtime exceptions are crashes, though, which ArithmeticException is
    – mid
    Jan 17, 2018 at 15:46

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