On 9/3/20 12:36 PM, Thomas Stüfe wrote:
On Thu, Sep 3, 2020, 21:27 Laurence Cable <[email protected]
<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
On 9/3/20 12:25 PM, Thomas Stüfe wrote:
On Thu, Sep 3, 2020, 21:07 Laurence Cable <[email protected]
<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
On 9/3/20 9:03 AM, Volker Simonis wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I'd like to get your opinion on a POC I've done in order to
speed up
> heap dumps on Linux:
>
> https://bugs.openjdk.java.net/browse/JDK-8252768
> http://cr.openjdk.java.net/~simonis/webrevs/2020/8252768/
>
> Currently, heap dumps can be taken by the SA tools from a
frozen
> process or core file or directly from a running process
with jcmd,
> jconsole & JMX, jmap, etc. If the heap of a running process
is dumped,
> this happens at a safepoint (see VM_HeapDumper). Because
the time to
> produce a heap dump is roughly proportional to the size and
fill ratio
> of the heap, this leads to safepoint times which can range
from ~100ms
> for a 100mb heap to ~1s for a 1gb heap up to 15s and more
for a 8gb
> heap (measured on my Core i7 laptop with SSD).
>
> One possibility to decrease the safepoint time is to
offload the
> dumping work to an asynchronous process. On Linux (and
probably any
> other OS which supports fork()) this can be achieved by
forking and
> offloading the heap dumping to the child process. Forking
still needs
> to happen at a safepoint, but forking is considerably
faster compared
> to the dumping process itself. The fork performance is still
> proportional to the size of the original Java process
because although
> fork won't copy any memory pages, the kernel still needs to
duplicate
> the page table entries of the process.
curious what is the. behavior of the parent/target JVM
process "after"
it executes the fork() at the safepoint? i.e what does it do
next?
It just continues its life. It will periodically try to reap the
child process, but apart from that it will just run on.
so then the state of the (parent's) heap may change "under" the
dumping child?
what am I missing?
When forking, the child process gets a *copy* of the parents address
space. That is if one were to implement fork() naively. Since copying
the parent address space would be prohibitively expensive, especially
for parent processes with a large footprint, modern OSes do a
copy-on-write.
The child gets a copy of the address space of the parent at the time
the fork was done. As long as the child only reads a page, and the
page has not been modified by the parent, this is physically the same
memory. If either parent or child writes to the page it gets really
duplicated.
Effectively, Volker uses the OS to get a frozen snapshot of the java
heap at fork time.
thanks for the clarification... I had brain fade on COW semantics...
> Linux uses a “copy-on-write” technique for the creation of
a forked
> child process. This means that right after creation, the
child process
> will have exactly the same memory image like its parent
process. But
> at the same time, the child process won’t use any
additional physical
> memory, as long as it doesn’t change (i.e. writes into) its
memory.
> Since heap dumping only reads the child process's memory
and then
> exits immediately, this technique can be applied even if
the Java
> process already uses almost the whole free physical memory.
>
> The POC I've created (see
> http://cr.openjdk.java.net/~simonis/webrevs/2020/8252768/)
decreases
> the aforementioned ~100ms, ~1s and 15s for a 100mb, 1gb and
8gb heap
> to ~3ms, ~15ms and ~60ms on my laptop which I think is
significant.
> You can try it out by using the new "-async" or
"-async=true" option
> of the "GC.heap_dump" jcmd command.
>
> Of course this change will require a CSR for the additional
jcmd
> GC.heap_dump "-async" option which I'll be happy to create
if there's
> any interest in this enhancement. Also, logging in the
child process
> might potentially interfere with logging in the parent VM
and probably
> will have to be removed in the final version, but I've left
it in for
> now to better illustrate what's happening. Finally, we
can't output
> the size of the created dump any more if we are using
asynchronous
> dumping but from my point of view that's not such a big
problem. Apart
> from that, the POC works surprisingly well :)
>
> Please let me know what you think and if there's something
I've overlooked?
>
> Best regards,
> Volker
>
> PS: by the way, asynchronous dumping combines just fine with
> compressed dumps. So you can easily use "GC.heap_dump
-async=true
> -gz=6"