Puzzled by a performance glitch? You might have to look at the generated code.
Examining generated code
The following HotSpot options (with an -XX: prefix on the command line) require OpenJDK 7 and an externally loadable disassembler plugin:
+PrintAssembly
print assembly code for bytecoded and native methods+PrintNMethods
print nmethods as they are generated+PrintNativeNMethods
print native method wrappers as they are generated+PrintSignatureHandlers
print native method signature handlers+PrintAdapterHandlers
print adapters (i2c, c2i) as they are generated+PrintStubCode
print stubs: deopt, uncommon trap, exception, safepoint, runtime support+PrintInterpreter
print interpreter code
These flags are "diagnostic", meaning that they must be preceded by -XX:+UnlockDiagnosticVMOptions
. On the command line, they must all be preceded by -XX:
. They may also be placed in a flags file, .hotspotrc
by default, or configurable as -XX:Flags=myhotspotrc.txt
.
Plugin Implementations
There are 2 implementations around:
OpenJDK sources (defines the plugin API)
This version of the plugin requires the Gnu disassembler, which is available separately as part of the binutils project.
Look at the README for instructions on building. Pre-built binaries do not seem to be available (help... anyone?).
Kenai project base-hsdis
This is a from-scratch implementation which uses code from the Bastard project at SourceForge. The copyrights on this code are non-restrictive.
The Kenai project offers binary downloads.
Installing the Plugin
Once you succeed in building or downloading the hsdis
binary library (in the following named DLL), you have to install it next to your libjvm.so (jvm.dll on Windows), in the same folder. (Alternatively, you can put it anywhere on your LD_LIBRARY_PATH
.) The DLL must be given the name that the JVM will be looking for. The core of the name will be hsdis-i386
for 32-bit Intel JVMs. Other names in use are hsdis-amd64
, hsdis-sparc
, and hsdis-sparcv9
. A prefix and/or suffix will be required, according to system-dependent rules for naming DLLs.
$ JDK7=my/copy/of/jre1.7.0 $ cp -p hsdis/.libs/hsdis.so $JDK7/lib/i386/client/libhsdis-i386.so $ cp -p hsdis/.libs/hsdis.so $JDK7/lib/i386/server/libhsdis-i386.so $ XJAVA="$JDK7/bin/java -XX:+UnlockDiagnosticVMOptions -XX:+PrintAssembly" $ $XJAVA -Xcomp -cp ~/Classes hello $ $XJAVA -Xcomp -cp ~/Classes -XX:PrintAssemblyOptions=hsdis-print-bytes hello $ $XJAVA -XX:-PrintAssembly -XX:+PrintStubCode $ $XJAVA -XX:-PrintAssembly -XX:+PrintInterpreter $ $XJAVA -XX:-PrintAssembly -XX:+PrintSignatureHandlers $ $XJAVA -Xbatch -cp ~/Classes -XX:+PrintCompilation myloopingbenchmark
The last line (with myloopingbenchmark
) is most typical, since it uses the batch execution mode common with benchmarks. The -XX:+PrintCompilation
flag will let you know which (if any) methods are being compiled.
Filtering Output
The -XX:+PrintAssembly
option prints everything. If that's too much, drop it and use one of the following options.
Individual methods may be printed:
CompileCommand=print,*MyClass.myMethod
prints assembly for just one methodCompileCommand=option,*MyClass.myMethod,PrintOptoAssembly
(debug build only) produces the old print command outputCompileCommand=option,*MyClass.myMethod,PrintNMethods
produces method dumps
These options accumulate.
If you get no output, use -XX:+PrintCompilation
to verify that your method is getting compiled at all.
Reading the compiler's mind
The -XX:+LogCompilation
flag produces a low-level XML file about compiler and runtime decisions, which may be interesting to some. The -XX:+UnlockDiagnosticVMOptions
must come first. The dump is to hotspot.log
in the current directory; use -XX:LogFile=foo.log
to change this.