Shenandoah GC
Shenandoah is an ultra-low pause time garbage collector that reduces GC pause times by performing more garbage collection work concurrently with the running Java program. CMS and G1 both perform concurrent marking of live objects. Shenandoah adds concurrent compaction, which means its pause times are no longer proportional to the size of the heap. Garbage collecting a 100 GB heap or a 2 GB heap has the same predictable pause behavior.
Shenandoah is available in source and binary forms in JDK 8u, 9, and 10 flavors, see the "Build and Run" section for more details.
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Overview
Shenandoah is the regionalized collector, it maintains the heap as the collection of regions.
The regular Shenandoah GC cycle looks like this:
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GC(3) Pause Init Mark 1.142ms GC(3) Concurrent marking 7388M->7624M(8192M) 373.087ms GC(3) Concurrent precleaning 7624M->7624M(8192M) 0.324ms GC(3) Pause Final Mark 7624M->2832M(8192M) 10.923ms GC(3) Concurrent evacuation 2836M->3224M(8192M) 115.076ms GC(3) Pause Init Update Refs 0.028ms GC(3) Concurrent update references 3224M->3424M(8192M) 210.427ms GC(3) Pause Final Update Refs 3424M->956M(8192M) 1.150ms GC(3) Concurrent reset bitmaps 956M->956M(8192M) 0.143ms |
The phases above do roughly this:
- Init Mark initiates the concurrent marking. It prepares the heap and application threads for concurrent mark, and then scans the root set. This is the first pause in the cycle, and the most dominant consumer is the root set scan. Therefore, its duration is dependent on the root set size.
- Concurrent Marking walks over the heap, and traces reachable objects. This phase runs alongside the application, and its duration is dependent on the number of live objects and the structure of object graph in the heap. Since the application is free to allocate new data during this phase, the heap occupancy goes up during concurrent marking.
- Final Mark finishes the concurrent marking by draining all pending marking/update queues and re-scanning the root set. It also initializes evacuation by figuring out the regions to be evacuated (collection set), pre-evacuating some roots, and generally prepares runtime for the next phase. Part of this work can be done concurrently during Concurrent precleaning phase. This is the second pause in the cycle, and the most dominant time consumers here are draining the queues and scanning the root set. Final mark phase also reclaims immediate garbage regions – that is, the regions where no live objects are present – this is why heap occupancy drops down at this phase.
- Concurrent Evacuation copies the objects out of collection set to other regions. This is the major difference against other OpenJDK GCs. This phase is again running along with application, and so application is free to allocate. Its duration is dependent on the size of chosen collection set for the cycle.
- Init Update Refs initializes the update references phase. It does almost nothing except making sure all GC and applications threads have finished evacuation, and then preparing GC for next phase. This is the third pause in the cycle, the shortest of them all.
- Concurrent Update References walks over the heap, and updates the references to objects that were moved during concurrent evacuation. Its duration is dependent on number of objects in heap, but not the object graph structure, because it scans the heap linearly. This phase runs concurrently with the application.
- Final Update Refs finishes the update references phase by re-updating the existing root set. It also recycles the regions from the collection set, because now heap does not have references to (stale) objects to them. This is the last pause in the cycle, and its duration is dependent on the size of root set.
Root set includes: thread local variables, references embedded in generated code, interned Strings, references from classloaders (e.g. static final references), JNI references, JVMTI references. Having larger root set generally means longer pauses with Shenandoah, see below for diagnostic techniques.
Performance Guidelines and Diagnostics
This section describes the approaches to test and diagnose performance behaviors with Shenandoah.
Basic configuration and command line options:
- Shenandoah performance, like the performance of almost all other GCs, depends on heap size. We expect it to perform better in cases when there is enough heap space to accommodate allocations while concurrent phases are running. The time for concurrent phases correlates with the live data set size (LDS) -- the space taken by live data. Therefore, the reasonable heap size is dependent on LDS and allocation pressure in the workload: for a given allocation rate, larger LDS-es require proportionally larger heap sizes; for a given LDS, larger allocation rates require larger heap sizes. For some workloads with minuscule live data sets and moderate allocation pressure, 1...2 GB heaps performs well. We routinely test on 4...128 GB heaps on various workloads with up to 80% LDS size. Don't be shy to try different heap sizes to see what fits your workload.
- -Xlog:gc would print the individual GC timings. This is not specific to Shenandoah, most recent GCs with JDK 9 Unified Logging would work like that.
- -Xlog:gc+ergo would print the heuristics decisions, which might shed light on outliers, if any.
- -Xlog:gc+stats would print the summary table on Shenandoah internal timings at the end of the run.
It is almost always a good idea to run with -Xlog:gc -Xlog:gc+ergo -Xlog:gc+stats for testing. This summary table conveys important information about GC performance, and we would almost inevitably ask for one in a performance bug report. Heuristics logs are useful to figure out GC outliers.
Other recommended JVM options are:
- -XX:+AlwaysPreTouch: committing all pages into memory helps to reduce latency hiccups
- -XX:+UseTransparentHugePages: this greatly improves performance on large heaps. It is recommended to set /sys/kernel/mm/transparent_hugepage/enabled and /sys/kernel/mm/transparent_hugepage/defrag to "madvise" on Linux. When running with AlwaysPreTouch, then init/shutdown would be faster, because it will pretouch with larger pages. It will also pay the defrag costs upfront at startup
- -XX:+UseNUMA: while Shenandoah does not support NUMA explicitly yet, it is a good idea to enable this to enable NUMA interleaving on multi-socket hosts. Coupled with AlwaysPreTouch, it provides better performance than the default out-of-the-box configuration
- -XX:-UseBiasedLocking: there is a tradeoff between uncontended (biased) locking throughput, and the safepoints JVM does to enable and disable them as needed. For latency-oriented workloads, it makes sense to turn biased locking off. Shenandoah turns it off by default, unless overridden by user choice.
- -XX:+DisableExplicitGC: invoking System.gc() from user code forces Shenandoah to perform STW Full GC, which is detrimental to GC pauses; it makes sense to disable this to protect from libraries that do this. There is an alternative -XX:+ExplicitGCInvokesConcurrent, that can force concurrent cycle instead of Full GC on System.gc(), you are advised to use that in cases System.gc() calls do matter.
Heuristics
Heuristics tell when Shenandoah starts the GC cycle, and regions it deems for evacuation. Heuristics can be selected with -XX:ShenandoahGCHeuristics=<name>. Some heuristics accept configuration parameters, which might help to tailor the GC operation to your use case better. Available heuristics include:
- adaptive (default). This heuristics observes the previous GC cycles, and tries to start the next GC cycle so that the free space available at all times was below the "free threshold". Useful tuning knobs are:
-XX:ShenandoahInitFreeThreshold=#: Initial remaining free threshold
-XX:ShenandoahMinFreeThreshold=#: Minimum remaining free threshold
-XX:ShenandoahMaxFreeThreshold=#: Maximum remaining free threshold
-XX:ShenandoahHappyCyclesThreshold=#: How many successful marking cycles before improving free threshold
-XX:ShenandoahGarbageThreshold=#: Sets the percentage of garbage a region need to contain before it can be marked for collection.
- dynamic. This heuristics decide to start GC cycle based on heap occupancy and allocation pressure. Useful tuning knobs for this heuristics are:
-XX:ShenandoahFreeThreshold=#: Set the percentage of free heap at which a GC cycle is started
-XX:ShenandoahAllocationThreshold=#: Set percentage of memory allocated since last GC cycle before a new GC cycle is started
- -XX:ShenandoahGarbageThreshold=#: Sets the percentage of garbage a region need to contain before it can be marked for collection
continuous. This heuristics runs GC cycles continuously, starting the next cycle as soon as previous cycle finishes, as long as allocations happen. This heuristics would normally incur throughput overheads, but shall provide the most prompt space reclamation. It is often a good idea to cap the number of concurrent GC threads with -XX:ConcGCThreads=<...> when using this heuristics.
- passive. (diagnostic). This heuristics tells GC to be completely passive. Once available memory runs out, Full Stop-The-World GC would be triggered. This heuristics is used for functional testing, but sometimes it is useful for bisecting performance anomalies with GC barriers (see below).
- aggressive. (diagnostic). This heuristics tells GC to be completely active. It will start the new GC cycle as soon as the previous one finishes (like "continuous"), and it will evacuate all live objects. This heuristics is useful for functional testing of the collector itself. It incurs heavy performance penalty.
- connectedness, generational, LRU (experimental). These are heuristics for partial collections that use the heap connectivity information to drive collections. These heuristics are heavily experimental, and currently do stop-the-world partial collections. "Connectedness" focuses on least connected regions, "generational" focuses on younger regions, "LRU" focuses on older reginos.
In some cycles, Update References phase is merged with Concurrent Marking phase, at heuristics discretion. You can forcefully enable/disable Update References with -XX:ShenandoahUpdateRefsEarly=[on|off].
Performance Analysis
Approaches to performance analysis:
- Some odd performance behaviors – like the allocation failure GCs, or long final marks – can be explained by heuristics issues. -Xlog:gc+ergo is your friend there. If you have a long-running workload, running under Shenandoah Visualizer would let you understand the high-level GC behavior. Sometimes the odd behavior is clearly visible there.
- Some performance difference can be explained by larger allocation pressure under Shenandoah, since it includes the forwarding pointer with each object. Look at the allocation rates to see if that might be a problem, and do experiments that could confirm this (for example, beefing up objects should diminish the performance difference against another collector). There are some cases when larger footprint means dropping out of CPU cache, look for L1/L2/LLC miss differences.
- Many throughput differences can be explained by GC barriers overhead. When running with -XX:ShenandoahGCHeuristics=passive, and that heuristics only, barriers are not required for correctness, and so we can selectively disable them to see if that improves performance on a particular workload. Note that in makes sense to compare against fully-enabled "passive" run, not against any other heuristics that does concurrent phases. The options for barrier disabling are:
- -XX:-ShenandoahSATBBarrier: disables "snapshot at the beginning" write barriers
- -XX:-ShenandoahReadBarrier: disables read barriers
- -XX:-ShenandoahWriteBarrier: disables write barriers (pre-store "to-space write" barriers, and any other write-related barriers, except SATB)
- -XX:-ShenandoahAcmpBarrier: disables acmp ("==") barriers
- -XX:-ShenandoahCASBarrier: disables compareAnd{Set,Exchange} barriers
- -XX:-ShenandoahCloneBarrier: disables object/array clone barriers
- Profiling the native GC code is easy with Linux perf:
- Build OpenJDK with --with-native-debug-symbols=internal, this will get you the mapping to C++ code
- Run the workload with perf record java ... or perf record -g java ...
- Open the report with perf report
- Profiling the barriers code requires PrintAssembly-enabled build. We recommend to use JMH -prof perfasm to create the isolated scenarios and looking at the generated code under Shenandoah.
It is important to understand that GC pauses might not be the only significant contributor to response times in regular applications. Having large GC pause spells the problem with response time with a very high probability, but the absence of long GC pauses does not always mean decent response time. Queueing delays, network latencies, other services latencies, OS scheduler jitter, etc. could be the contributing cost. Running Shenandoah with response time measurement is recommended to get the full picture of what is going on in the system, which can then be used to correlate with GC pause time statistics.
For example, this is a sample report with jHiccup on one of the workloads:
Functional Diagnostics
This section describes the ways one can diagnose and/or debug Shenandoah.
Basic configuration and command line options:
- Your first line of defense is GC verifier. It is available in both release and fastdebug builds, and can be enabled with -XX:+ShenandoahVerify. If verifier identifies a problem, then it is most likely the GC bug. A simple reproducer would be convenient to have in order to diagnose this better. In many cases, what happened before in the GC matters, e.g. the last actions taken by GC. Be sure to gather that data with GC logging.
- In many cases, running with fastdebug build will produce the meaningful assert messages, pointing at the earliest moment when GC detected the functional anomaly, and Shenandoah asserts a lot. These builds can be produced by adding --enable-debug to configure, and re-building.
- In many cases, running with -XX:ShenandoahGCHeuristics=aggressive is an efficient way to shake out GC bugs. This heuristics runs back-to-back GCs, and evacuates all non-empty regions. Since Shenandoah does most GC heavy-lifting concurrently, this does not block application from executing, although GC would consume much more cycles in this mode and slow the application down.
- It is possible to disable concurrent GCs with -XX:ShenandoahGCHeuristics=passive, which will do the stop-the-world mark-compact GCs only, and avoid doing most of concurrent work.
- Shenandoah supports several options that add even more verifications: -XX:+ShenandoahStoreCheck lets C2 compile machine code that checks that writes happen in tospace only. -XX:+ShenandoahVerifyOptoBarriers verifies barriers in C2's ideal graph. -XX:VerifyStrictOopOperations performs additional checks to verify that oop comparisons are done correctly (fastdebug only).
- If you suspect a JIT bug (and there are lots of Shenandoah-specific optimizations), it is a very good idea to try bisect which compiler failed by trying several VM modes: -Xint (interpreter only), -XX:TieredStopAtLevel=1 (C1 only), -XX:-TieredCompilation (interpreter and C2 only), default (interpreter, tiered C1, tiered C2).
Approaches for debugging:
- Put logging statements in the code around the failing assert to understand the issue better. With enough logging, you can retrace everything that happened in the collector.
- Attach a native debugger, for example, gdb, by asking VM to do the external action on failure with -XX:OnError="gdb - %p" (%p would get substituted with process PID)
- Create a simple reproducer and hand it over to Shenandoah developers. :)
Bug reports are welcome at the mailing list.
Build, Download, Install, and Run
Shenandoah is under active development outside of JDK master releases. It will hopefully enter mainline OpenJDK builds under JEP 189 in JDK 10 timeframe. That said, there are downstream builds available for current JDKs, which one can try today. The changes flow between the development repos and builds as described on a simplified diagram below. If you are an early adopter, trying a bleeding edge should be more profitable performance-wise, but may risk exposure to not-yet-discovered bugs. If you are looking at running Shenandoah in the actual deployments, using the most stable builds is preferred.
More detailed, there are different ways to get Shenandoah:
Build From Source
This would guarantee you run the latest and greatest version. Adding --enable-debug to configure would produce the "fastdebug" build. Some features and bugfixes may not be available in older JDK versions. Older JDK versions are supposed to be more stable.
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# JDK 10: $ hg clone http://hg.openjdk.java.net/shenandoah/jdk10 shenandoah # JDK 9: $ hg clone http://hg.openjdk.java.net/shenandoah/jdk9 shenandoah # JDK 8u: $ hg clone http://hg.openjdk.java.net/shenandoah/jdk8u shenandoah # Configure and build: $ cd shenandoah/ $ sh ./get_source.sh $ sh ./configure $ make images # JDK 10, 9: $ build/linux-x86_64-normal-server-release/images/jdk/bin/java -XX:+UseShenandoahGC -Xlog:gc [...][info][gc] Using Shenandoah # JDK 8u: $ build/linux-x86_64-normal-server-release/images/j2sdk-image/bin/java -XX:+UseShenandoahGC -version openjdk version "1.8.0-internal" OpenJDK Runtime Environment (build 1.8.0-internal-shade_2016_12_19_15_52-b00) OpenJDK 64-Bit Server VM (build 25.71-b00, mixed mode) |
In all cases for building from source it is optional, but advisable to run the tests. This is especially important on platforms beyond what Shenandoah currently targets, and/or building with too new or too old toolchains. You will need jtreg to run the tests, and it makes sense to run test against fastdebug build first:
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# Download and unpack jtreg from https://adopt-openjdk.ci.cloudbees.com/job/jtreg/lastSuccessfulBuild/artifact/ # Hook up jtreg to the build: $ sh ./configure --with-jtreg=<jtreg folder> --with-debug-level=fastdebug $ sh ./configure --with-jtreg=<jtreg folder> --with-debug-level=release # Run the tests: $ CONF=linux-x86_64-normal-server-fastdebug make images test TEST="hotspot_gc_shenandoah" $ CONF=linux-x86_64-normal-server-release make images test TEST="hotspot_gc_shenandoah" |
Binary Development Builds
There are (nightly/weekly) development builds available at these locations:
- Linux/x86_64 nightly builds are available at builds.shipilev.net
- Linux/x86_64 builds are also available as Docker images, e.g. shipilev/openjdk:10-shenandoah
- Binary builds from AdoptOpenJDK: jdk8, jdk9 – look at the publish dates, the builds might be outdated
Distribution Releases
In some Linux distributions, Shenandoah is available within the IcedTea/OpenJDK binaries.
Fedora 24/25/26 OpenJDK builds include Shenandoah:
Code Block language bash $ cat /etc/redhat-release Fedora release 26 (Twenty Six) $ java -XX:+UseShenandoahGC -version openjdk version "1.8.0_131" OpenJDK Runtime Environment (build 1.8.0_131-b12) OpenJDK 64-Bit Server VM (build 25.131-b12, mixed mode)
- RHEL 7.4 (and RHEL derivatives) ships with OpenJDK that includes Shenandoah as Technology Preview
- Gentoo ebuilds for IcedTea have Shenandoah USE flag
Resources
- Shenandoah Project
- Repositories
- Mailing list: shenandoah-dev
- Members
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