Using the Monitoring and Management APIs
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This document provides a short introduction to the WebLogic JRockit Monitoring and Management APIs (JMAPI) an API that provides a way to monitor and manage the WebLogic JRockit JVM.
This section includes information on the following subjects:
This document is simply an overview of JMAPI.While it provides basic instructions on how to implement this interface and describes some of its capabilities, the best source of documentation is the javadoc, available at:
http://download.oracle.com/docs/cd/E13188_01/jrockit/docs50/jmapi/javadoc/Management API/index.html
To implement JMAPI, you first need to fetch a reference to an actual instance of JVM by using the JVMFactory.
JVMFactory
provides a static method to fetch an instance of JVM. This is the starting point for working with the API.JVM
provides basic information about the JVM and is also the interface used to access the different information subsystems available. These subsystems are:ClassLibrary
, which provides a way to monitor and manage the set of currently loaded Classes and ClassLoaders.CompilationSystem
, which provides a way to monitor and manage the way methods and constructors are compiled.Machine
, which provides information about the hardware the JVM is running on, like CPUs, network adapters and memory.MemorySystem
, which provides heap and garbage collection data.OperatingSystem
, which passes information about the OS the JVM is running on.ProfilingSystem
, which provides a way to perform lightweight profiling of the JVM, for instance invocation counting.ThreadSystem
, which provides thread stack dumps, thread snapshots, thread counts and means to access the threads running in WebLogic JRockit.To fetch the instance of JVM
, you need to add code such as the following:
com.bea.jvm.JVM myJVM = com.bea.jvm.JVMFactory.getJVM();
From the JVM
instance you can access the different subsystems, such as the memory system. From the memory system you can, among other things, ask for heap size information or access the GarbageCollector
. Reading the currently used heap size (in bytes) looks like this:
Listing 1 Reading the Current Heap Size
com.bea.jvm.JVM myJVM = com.bea.jvm.JVMFactory.getJVM();
long heapSize = myJVM.getMemorySystem().getUsedHeapSize();
To check if we are using a parallel garbage collector with a nursery, you might include something similar to the example in Listing 2:
Listing 2 Checking the Garbage Collector Type
com.bea.jvm.GarbageCollector myGC = myJVM.getMemorySystem().getGarbageCollector();
boolean isParallelWithNursery = myGC.isParallel() &&
myGC.isGenerational();
You can use JMAPI to subscribe to a number of different events:
ClassLoadEvent
, which reports loaded and unloaded classes.CompilationListener
, which reports compiled methods and constructors.GarbageCollectionEvent
, which is fired after a garbage collection.Listing 3 shows how to add an anonymous ClassLoadListener
that prints out the name of the class that was loaded/unloaded:
Listing 3 Adding and Anonymous ClassLoadListener
JVM myJVM = JVMFactory.getJVM();
myJVM.getClassLibrary().addClassLoadListener(new
ClassLoadListener()
{
public void onClassLoad(ClassLoadEvent event)
{
String prefix = (event.getEventType() ==
ClassLoadEvent.CLASS_LOADED) ? "Loaded" : "Unloaded";
System.out.println(prefix + " : " +
event.getClassObject().getName());
}
});
Listing 4 shows how to add an anonymous CompilationListener
that prints out the method/constructor that was compiled and the optimization level used.
Listing 4 Adding an Anonymous CompilationListener
JVM myJVM = JVMFactory.getJVM();
myJVM.getCompilationSystem().addCompilationListener(
new CompilationListener()
{
public void onMethodCompilation(
CompilationEvent event)
{
String prefix = "Compiled " + (event.hasConstructor() ? " constructor " +
event.getConstructor().getClass().getName() : "method " +
event.getMethod().getClass().getName());
System.out.println(prefix + " : Optimization lvl " +
event.getOptimizationLevel().getDescription());
}
});
The WebLogic JRockit JVM includes a very efficient, low overhead profiler to get method invocation counts and method timing information.
Listing 6 shows how to call a method in an example class (shown in Listing 5), then print out how many times it has been invoked and the total time spent in that method.
public class A
{
public boolean check(Object obj)
{
return this.getClass().isInstance(obj);
}
}
Listing 6 Calling a Method in an Example Class
ProfilingSystem profiler =
JVMFactory.getJVM().getProfilingSystem();
A a = new A();
Method [] methods = A.class.getDeclaredMethods();
profiler.setInvocationCountEnabled(methods[0], true);
profiler.setTimingEnabled(methods[0], true);
for (int i = 0; i < 100000; i++) a.check(a);
System.out.println("Profiling system: check method invoked " +
m_jrockit.getProfilingSystem().getInvocationCount(methods[0]) + "
times");
System.out.println("Time spent in method " +
m_jrockit.getProfilingSystem().getTiming(methods[0])
+ " ms");
JMAPI also provides access to an exception counter that allows you to count how many exceptions of a certain class—and, optionally, all of its subclasses—have been thrown. Listing 7 shows an example of counting IOExceptions
.
Listing 7 Counting IOExceptions
with JMAPI
profiler.setExceptionCountEnabled(IOException.class,
true, false);
for (int i = 0; i < 10000; i++)
{
try
{
throw new IOException();
}
catch (Exception e)
{
// Deliberately left blank.
}
}
System.out.println("Profiling system: exception counts = "
+ m_jrockit.getProfilingSystem().
getExceptionCount(IOException.class));
To access JMAPI from code running in WebLogic JRockit that has a security manager, the permission com.bea.jvm.ManagementPermission
"createInstance
" must first be granted to that code. For more information on how to grant code permissions, see Permissions in the Java 2 SDK.
If the code has not been granted the permission, any attempt to access JMAPI will result in a SecurityException being thrown.
Listing 8 shows a simple policy statement, granting all code the permission to access the JMAPI:
Listing 8 Accessing JMAPI from Code Having a Security Manager
grant{
// Needed to access the JRockit Management API.
permission com.bea.jvm.ManagementPermission "createInstance";
};
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