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We have a long running server application running Java 5, and profiling it we can see the old generation growing slowly over time. It's correctly freed on a full GC, but I'd like to be able to look at the unreachable objects in Eclipse MAT using a heap dump. I've successfully obtained a heap dump using +XX:HeapDumpOnCtrlBreak, but the JVM always does a GC before dumping the heap. Apparently this doesn't happen on Java 6 but we're stuck on 5 for now. Is there any way to prevent this?

5 Answers 5

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use jconsole or visualvm or jmc or ... other jmx management console. open HotSpotDiagnostic in com.sun.management. select method dumpHeap and input two parameters:

  • path to the dump file
  • (true/false) dump only live objects. use false to dump all objects.

Note that the dump file will be written by the JVM you connected to, not by JVisualVM, so if the JVM is running on a different system, it will be written on that system.

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    Note that VisualVM requires the VisualVM-MBeans plugin for this.
    – Natan
    Jan 18, 2018 at 14:37
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Have you tried the standard jmap tool shipped with the JDK? The jmap toll was officially introduced in Java 5.

Example command line: /java/bin/jmap -heap:format=b

The result can be processed with the standard jhat tool or with GUI applications such as MAT.

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I have some code here that can programmatically take a heap dump over JMX:

Link: JmxHeapDumper.java

The comments in the source code contain 2 links to articles that contained useful information about how to take heap dumps. I don't know for sure but if you are in luck, perhaps the JMX approach would have some way of avoiding the GC. Hope this helps !

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  • Great, thanks, I'll take a look and see if it GCs beforehand or not. Being able to do it programmatically seems pretty useful, actually.
    – Colin
    Aug 14, 2009 at 15:13
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I suggest a 3rd-party profiler such as YourKit, which may allow you to take snapshots without kicking off the GC first. Added bonus, you can take a snapshot without the whole ctrl-break shenanigans.

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  • Thanks, I actually have a copy of JProfiler, but I didn't realise it could do this. I'll give it a go.
    – Colin
    Aug 14, 2009 at 14:59
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jProfiler (ej-technologies) can do this.

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