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JDK 1.6 comes bundled with a handy tool called VisualVM that lets you inspect and interact with running Java processes. One feature is that it auto-detects running JVMs on the local machine. Most are listed as " (pid xxxx)" but some have a name and an icon, like VisualVM itself and others like NetBeans (see the screenshot in this dzone article for example).

How do I inject my application name and icon into the JVM so it shows up properly in VisualVM's application list? Does my app need to be running JRE 1.6 or can I do this under 1.5 too?

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  • Here's a hint I learned by looking at LocalVmManager in OpenJDK: the list of local VMs is discovered by looking in $TMP/hsperfdata_$USER/. Each file in there is named for the PID of the VM. Contained therein is the command line as "sun.rt.javaCommand" but the file for the VisualVM process does not contain the string "VisualVM" so it can't come directly from that file. Dec 13, 2010 at 22:43

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I solved half of my own question via a NetBeans forum post answer. Adding a JVM command line arg of -Dvisualvm.display.name=FooBar makes VisualVM show the app as "FooBar". But I still can't figure out how to affect the icon.

UPDATE: Alas, I think I found my answer for the icon. The icons are hard-coded into VisualVM via MainClassApplicationTypeFactory in the VisualVM source, invoked from the static method ApplicationTypeFactory.getApplicationTypeFor(Application). I can't see any way to inject a new icon into VisualVM except by making a VisualVM plugin which could register a new type factory -- the Glassfish plugin does this via GlassFishApplicationTypeFactory.initialize() for example.

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  • Thanks, Chris. I was just wondering that on Friday. No more guessing game! Dec 15, 2010 at 5:32
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    More advice to future readers: it appears to me that you can't have spaces in the app name. That is, -Dvisualvm.display.name=Foo Bar and -Dvisualvm.display.name="Foo Bar" don't work. Jan 30, 2012 at 1:48
  • kinda lame to have to write a plugin and register only to have a decent visual representation of the app you want to track. Maybe a manifest like file that is auto discovered by VisualVM will be nice...or just use app's own icon...somehow
    – Alex
    Jan 17, 2013 at 8:10
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    If you want to have a space in the process name, use a no-break space (U+00AD).
    – user2882328
    Oct 15, 2013 at 11:31
  • Anyone have any idea how this could be done for jps as well? It'd be nice if they all used a display.name or something.
    – Bill K
    Apr 4, 2018 at 17:54

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