Showing posts with label JVM heap. Show all posts
Showing posts with label JVM heap. Show all posts

Thursday, May 31, 2012

JAVA Heap Analysis - GC limit exeeded


Troubleshooting tools

** all these tools can be downloaded for free **
  •  Eclipse Indigo Release 
  •  Memory Analyzer via IBM Support Assistant 4.1 (HotSpot Heap Dump analysis) 
  • Java VM: Windows HotSpot JRE 1.6.0_24 64-bit

Sample Java program

The simple sample Java program below will be used to triggered an OutOfMemoryError; allowing us to analyze the generated HotSpot Heap Dump file. Simply create a new Java class : JVMOutOfMemoryErrorSimulator.java to the Eclipse project of your choice and either rename or keep the current package as is.

This program is basically creating multiple String instances within a Map data structure until the Java Heap depletion.


** please make sure your Eclipse compiler and JRE is 1.6 **
01package org.ph.javaee.javaheap;
02
03import java.util.Map;
04import java.util.HashMap;
05
06/**
07* JVMOutOfMemoryErrorSimulator
08*
09* @author PH
10
11*/public class JVMOutOfMemoryErrorSimulator {
12
13       private final static int NB_ITERATIONS = 500000;
14
15       // ~1 KB data footprint      
16       private final static String LEAKING_DATA_PREFIX = "datadatadatadatadatadatadatadatadatadatadatadatadatadatadatadatadatadatadatadat
17adatadatadatadatadatadatadatadatadatadatadatadatadatadatadatadatadatadatadatadat
18adatadatadatadatadatadatadatadatadatadatadatadatadatadatadatadatadatadatadatadat
19adatadatadatadatadatadatadatadatadatadatadatadatadatadatadatadatadatadatadatadat
20adatadatadatadatadatadatadatadatadatadatadatadatadatadatadatadatadatadatadatadat
21adatadatadatadatadatadatadatadatadatadatadatadatadatadatadatadatadatadatadata";
22
23       // Map used to stored our leaking String instances      
24       private static Map leakingMap;
25
26       static {             
27              leakingMap = new HashMap();      
28       }
29
30       /**       
31        * @param args       
32        */      
33        public static void main(String[] args) {
34
35              System.out.println("JVM OutOfMemoryError Simulator 1.0");         
36              System.out.println("Author: Pierre-Hugues Charbonneau");         
37              System.out.println(" http ://javaeesupportpatterns.blogspot.com/");
38
39              try {
40
41                     for (int i = 0; i < NB_ITERATIONS; i++) {
42
43                          String data = LEAKING_DATA_PREFIX + i;
44
45                          // Add data to our leaking Map data structure...     
46                          leakingMap.put(data, data);
47
48                     }
49
50              catch (Throwable any) {                    
51                     if (any instanceof java.lang.OutOfMemoryError){
52                             System.out.println("OutOfMemoryError triggered! "
53                                         + any.getMessage() + " [" + any + "]");
54
55                     else {                          
56                           System.out.println("Unexpected Exception! " +
57                                   any.getMessage() + " [" + any + "]");
58                            }             
59                     }
60
61                     System.out.println("simulator done!");      
62            }
63
64}

Step #1 - Setup your JVM start-up arguments

First, setup your Eclipse Java runtime arguments as per below. For our example, we used an external JRE 1.6 outside the Eclipse IDE with a Java Heap maximum capacity of 512 MB.

The key JVM argument allowing us to generate a Heap Dump is -XX:+HeapDumpOnOutOfMemoryError which tells the JVM to generate a Heap Dump following an OutOfMemoryError condition.



Step #2 - Run the sample Java program

The next step is to run our Java program. Depending on your computer specs, this program will run between 5-30 seconds before existing with an OutOfMemoryError.


As you can see, the JVM generated a Heap Dump file java_pid3880.hprof . It is now time to fire the Memory Analyzer tool and analyze the JVM Heap Dump.

Step #3 - Load the Heap Dump

Analyzing a Heap Dump is an analysis activity that can be simple or very complex. The goal of this tutorial is to give you the basics of Heap Dump analysis. For more Heap Dump analysis, please refer to the other case studies of this Blog.




Step #4 - Analyze Heap Dump

Below are the snapshots and analysis steps that you can follow to understand the memory leak that we simulated in our sample Java program.





As you can see, the Heap Dump analysis using the Memory Analyzer tool was able to easily identify our primary leaking Java class and data structure.

Conclusion

I hope this simple Java program and Heap Dump analysis tutorial has helped you understand the basic principles of Java Heap analysis using the raw Heap Dump data. This analysis is critical when dealing with OutOfMemoryError: GC overhead problems since those are symptoms of either Java Heap leak of Java Heap footprint / tuning problem.

Reference
http://www.javacodegeeks.com