Skip to content

HubSpot/astack

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

53 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

astack

You've heard of jstack and pstack, well this is a new tool called astack.

astack is a swiss army knife of easily getting thread dumps from JVMs and analyzing them from the command line.

Guiding principles:

  • No complicated network setup (e.g. JMX)
  • Designed for linux (sorry OS X)
  • Single file script for ease of copying

Dependencies:

  • gdb

Screenshots

Using the aggregation option

Using the grep option

Synopsis

There are two steps to invoking astack: (1) select which process to inspect and (2) specify what action to take. There are two ways to select which process:

  1. -p PID - Select based on PID
  2. -n NAME - Match based on case insensitive search of command line

Note that name searching does not work if more than one process match.

Once you have a process, there are a few options you can take to get different output:

  1. -r - Just get the raw stacktrace as if you sent a SIGQUIT to the java process and captured the stdout with some extra info.
  2. -a NLINES - Group and count the threads by NLINES of stack and display them in order of occurrence with one representative thread.
  3. -s NSAMPLES - Sample the threaddump a few times and display which ones are most active (most oftenly in RUNNABLE state).

Usage description from the process itself:

Usage: astack [options]

Options:
  -h, --help            show this help message and exit
  -p PID, --pid=PID     process pid
  -n NAME, --process-name=NAME
                        match name of process
  -r, --raw             print the raw stacktrace and exit
  -u, --upgrade         automatically upgrade
  -a AGG, --aggregate=AGG
                        Aggregate stacktraces (specify the number of lines to
                        aggregate)
  -s SAMPLE, --sample=SAMPLE
                        Sample stacktraces to the most active ones (specify
                        the number of seconds)
  -i INPUT, --input=INPUT
                        read stacktrace from file (or - with stdin)
  --pretty, --pretty    Force colors
  -g MATCH, --grep=MATCH
                        Show only threads that match text

Theory of Operation

Rather than hooking into the JVM and asking it for a stack trace via instrumentation, this script takes the approach of sending a SIGQUIT signal and extracting the stacktrace from the JVM while it's running. The way it does this is by using gdb to temporarily redirect stdout while the JVM is spouting out the thread dump, and switching it back when it's done. This does mean that it can occasionally get some artifacts if your JVM is rapidly sending output to stdout. In most typical scenarios (e.g. log lines) you wouldn't see any interference.

The advantage of using this technique is that even when a JVM is under heavy load and cannot fulfill a instrumentation approach, the low level response to a SIGQUIT signal is still functional. In most cases, thread dumps are most useful when the JVM is at its limit, so this technique can get interesting results very easily.

Install

$ sudo pip install astack

Ubuntu 10.04 and up support

On Ubuntu 10.04 and up you'll need to run this (as root):

# echo 0 > /proc/sys/kernel/yama/ptrace_scope

Bugs & Issues

Feel free to file any issues with github's issues page.

License

MIT License, copyright HubSpot 2012. See the bundled LICENSE file for details.

About

Simple stacktrace analysis tool for the JVM

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published

Languages