If you just need to dump all stack traces to stdout, kill -3
and jstack
should be the cheapest. The functionality is implemented natively in JVM code. No intermediate structures are created - the VM prints everything itself while it walks through the stacks.
Both commands perform the same VM operation except that signal handler prints stack traces locally to stdout of Java process, while jstack
receives the output from the target VM through IPC (Unix domain socket on Linux or Named Pipe on Windows).
jstack
uses Dynamic Attach mechanism under the hood. You can also utilize Dynamic Attach directly if you wish to receive the stack traces as a plain stream of bytes.
import com.sun.tools.attach.VirtualMachine;
import sun.tools.attach.HotSpotVirtualMachine;
import java.io.InputStream;
public class StackTrace {
public static void main(String[] args) throws Exception {
String pid = args[0];
HotSpotVirtualMachine vm = (HotSpotVirtualMachine) VirtualMachine.attach(pid);
try (InputStream in = vm.remoteDataDump()) {
byte[] buf = new byte[8000];
for (int bytes; (bytes = in.read(buf)) > 0; ) {
System.out.write(buf, 0, bytes);
}
} finally {
vm.detach();
}
}
}
Note that all of the mentioned methods operate in a VM safepoint anyway. This means that all Java threads are stopped while the stack traces are collected.
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