Module jdk.jfr

Package jdk.jfr

This package provides classes to create events and control Flight Recorder.

Defining events

Flight Recorder collects data as events. An event has a time stamp, duration and usually an application-specific payload, useful for diagnosing the running application up to the failure or crash.

To define a Flight Recorder event, extend Event and add fields that matches the data types of the payload. Metadata about fields, such as labels, descriptions and units, can be added by using the annotations available in the jdk.jfr package, or by using a user-defined annotation that has the MetadataDefinition annotation.

After an event class is defined, instances can be created (event objects). Data is stored in the event by assigning data to fields. Event timing can be explicitly controlled by using the begin and end methods available in the Event class.

Gathering data to store in an event can be expensive. The Event.shouldCommit() method can be used to verify whether an event instance would actually be written to the system when the Event#commit() method is invoked. If Event.shouldCommit() returns false, then those operations can be avoided.

Sometimes the field layout of an event is not known at compile time. In that case, an event can be dynamically defined. However, dynamic events might not have the same level of performance as statically defined ones and tools might not be able to identify and visualize the data without knowing the layout.

To dynamically define an event, use the EventFactory class and define fields by using the ValueDescriptor class, and define annotations by using the AnnotationElement class. Use the factory to allocate an event and the Event.set(int, Object) method to populate it.

Controlling Flight Recorder

Flight Recorder can be controlled locally by using the jcmd command line tool or remotely by using the FlightRecorderMXBean interface, registered in the platform MBeanServer. When direct programmatic access is needed, a Flight Recorder instance can be obtained by invoking FlightRecorder.getFlightRecorder() and a recording created by using Recording class, from which the amount of data to record is configured.

Settings and configuration

A setting consists of a name/value pair, where name specifies the event and setting to configure, and the value specifies what to set it to.

The name can be formed in the following ways:

<event-name> + "#" + <setting-name>

or

<event-id> + "#" + <setting-name>

For example, to set the sample interval of the CPU Load event to once every second, use the name "jdk.CPULoad#period" and the value "1 s". If multiple events use the same name, for example if an event class is loaded in multiple class loaders, and differentiation is needed between them, then the name is "56#period". The ID for an event is obtained by invoking EventType.getId() method and is valid for the Java Virtual Machine instance that the event is registered in.

A list of available event names is retrieved by invoking FlightRecorder.getEventTypes() and EventType.getName(). A list of available settings for an event type is obtained by invoking EventType.getSettingDescriptors() and ValueDescriptor.getName().

Predefined settings

Event setting names and their purpose.
Name Description Default value Format Example values
enabled Specifies whether the event is recorded "true" String representation of a Boolean ("true" or "false") "true"
"false"
threshold Specifies the duration below which an event is not recorded "0" (no limit) "0" if no threshold is used, otherwise a string representation of a positive Long followed by a space and one of the following units:
  • "ns" (nanoseconds)
  • "us" (microseconds)
  • "ms" (milliseconds)
  • "s" (seconds)
  • "m" (minutes)
  • "h" (hours)
  • "d" (days)
"0"
"10 ms"
"1 s"
period Specifies the interval at which the event is emitted, if it is periodic "everyChunk" "everyChunk", if a periodic event should be emitted with every file rotation, otherwise a string representation of a positive Long value followed by an empty space and one of the following units:
  • "ns" (nanoseconds)
  • "us" (microseconds)
  • "ms" (milliseconds)
  • "s" (seconds)
  • "m" (minutes)
  • "h" (hours)
  • "d" (days)
"20 ms"
"1 s"
"everyChunk"
stackTrace Specifies whether the stack trace from the Event#commit() method is recorded "true" String representation of a Boolean ("true" or "false") "true",
"false"

Null-handling

All methods define whether they accept or return null in the Javadoc. Typically this is expressed as "not null". If a null parameter is used where it is not allowed, a java.lang.NullPointerException is thrown. If a null parameters is passed to a method that throws other exceptions, such as java.io.IOException, the java.lang.NullPointerException takes precedence, unless the Javadoc for the method explicitly states how null is handled, i.e. by throwing java.lang.IllegalArgumentException.

Since:
9
  • Interface Summary 
    Interface Description
    FlightRecorderListener
    Callback interface to monitor Flight Recorder's life cycle.
  • Class Summary 
    Class Description
    AnnotationElement
    Describes event metadata, such as labels, descriptions and units.
    Configuration
    A collection of settings and metadata describing the configuration.
    Event
    Base class for events, to be subclassed in order to define events and their fields.
    EventFactory
    Class for defining an event at runtime.
    EventSettings
    Convenience class for applying event settings to a recording.
    EventType
    Describes an event, its fields, settings and annotations.
    FlightRecorder
    Class for accessing, controlling, and managing Flight Recorder.
    FlightRecorderPermission
    Permission for controlling access to Flight Recorder.
    Recording
    Provides means to configure, start, stop and dump recording data to disk.
    SettingControl
    Base class to extend to create setting controls.
    SettingDescriptor
    Describes an event setting.
    ValueDescriptor
    Describes the event fields and annotation elements.
  • Enum Summary 
    Enum Description
    RecordingState
    Indicates a state in the life cycle of a recording.
  • Annotation Types Summary 
    Annotation Type Description
    BooleanFlag
    Event field annotation, specifies that the value is a boolean flag, a true or false value
    Category
    Event annotation, to associate the event type with a category, in the format of a human-readable path.
    ContentType
    Meta annotation, specifies that an annotation represents a content type, such as a time span or a frequency.
    DataAmount
    Event field annotation, specifies that a value represents an amount of data (for example, bytes).
    Description
    Annotation that describes an element by using a sentence or two.
    Enabled
    Event annotation, determines if an event should be enabled by default.
    Experimental
    Annotation that specifies that an element is experimental and may change without notice.
    Frequency
    Event field annotation, specifies that the value is a frequency, measured in Hz.
    Label
    Annotation that sets a human-readable name for an element (for example, "Maximum Throughput").
    MemoryAddress
    Event field annotation, specifies that the value is a memory address.
    MetadataDefinition
    Meta annotation for defining new types of event metadata.
    Name
    Annotation that overrides the default name for an element (for example, when the default package for an event is not appropriate).
    Percentage
    Event field annotation to use on fractions, typically between 0.0 and 1.0, to specify that the value is a percentage.
    Period
    Event annotation, specifies the default setting value for a periodic event.
    Registered
    Event annotation, for programmatic event registration.
    Relational
    Meta annotation for relational annotations, to be used on an annotation.
    SettingDefinition
    Annotation that specifies that a method in an event class should be used to filter out events.
    StackTrace
    Event annotation, determines whether an event by default has a stack trace or not.
    Threshold
    Event annotation, specifies the default duration below which an event is not recorded (for example, "20 ms").
    Timespan
    Event field annotation, specifies that the value is a duration.
    Timestamp
    Event field annotation, specifies that the value is a point in time.
    TransitionFrom
    Event field annotation, specifies that the event transitioned from a thread.
    TransitionTo
    Event field annotation, specifies that the event will soon transition to a thread.
    Unsigned
    Event field annotation, specifies that the value is of an unsigned data type.