I'd like to create a thread that keeps track of the memory usage and cpu usage.
If the application reaches a high level, I want to generate an heap dump or a thread dump.
Is there a way to generate a Thread dump runtime without restarting?
Here's how we do it programmatically: http://pastebin.com/uS5jYpd4
We use the JMX
ThreadMXBean
and ThreadInfo
classes:
ThreadMXBean mxBean = ManagementFactory.getThreadMXBean();
ThreadInfo[] threadInfos = mxBean.getThreadInfo(mxBean.getAllThreadIds(), 0);
...
You can also do a kill -QUIT pid
under ~unix to dump the stacks to the standard-out. There is also jstack to dump the stack of a JVM.
We also have an automation which dumps the stack if the load average of the application is above some threshold:
private long lastCpuTimeMillis;
private long lastPollTimeMillis;
public void checkLoadAverage() {
long now = System.currentTimeMillis();
long currentCpuMillis = getTotalCpuTimeMillis();
double loadAvg = calcLoadAveragePercentage(now, currentCpuMillis);
if (loadAvg > LOAD_AVERAGE_DUMP_THRESHOLD) {
try {
dumpStack("Load average percentage is " + loadAvg);
} catch (IOException e) {
// Oh well, we tried
}
}
lastCpuTimeMillis = currentCpuMillis;
lastPollTimeMillis = now;
}
private long getTotalCpuTimeMillis() {
long total = 0;
for (long id : threadMxBean.getAllThreadIds()) {
long cpuTime = threadMxBean.getThreadCpuTime(id);
if (cpuTime > 0) {
total += cpuTime;
}
}
// since is in nano-seconds
long currentCpuMillis = total / 1000000;
return currentCpuMillis;
}
private double calcLoadAveragePercentage(long now, long currentCpuMillis) {
long timeDiff = now - lastPollTimeMillis;
if (timeDiff == 0) {
timeDiff = 1;
}
long cpuDiff = currentCpuMillis - lastCpuTimeMillis;
double loadAvg = (double) cpuDiff / (double) timeDiff;
return loadAvg;
}