| JSTAT(1) | JDK Commands | JSTAT(1) |
NAME¶
jstat - monitor JVM statistics
SYNOPSIS¶
Note: This command is experimental and unsupported.
jstat generalOptions
jstat outputOptions [-t] [-h lines] vmid [interval [count]]
- generalOptions
- A single general command-line option. See General Options.
- outputOptions
- An option reported by the -options option. One or more output options that consist of a single statOption, plus any of the -t, -h, and -J options. See Output Options for the jstat Command.
- -t
- Displays a time-stamp column as the first column of output. The time stamp is the time since the start time of the target JVM.
- -h n
- Displays a column header every n samples (output rows), where n is a positive integer. The default value is 0, which displays the column header of the first row of data.
- vmid
- A virtual machine identifier, which is a string that indicates the target JVM. See Virtual Machine Identifier.
- interval
- The sampling interval in the specified units, seconds (s) or milliseconds (ms). Default units are milliseconds. This must be a positive integer. When specified, the jstat command produces its output at each interval.
- count
- The number of samples to display. The default value is infinity, which causes the jstat command to display statistics until the target JVM terminates or the jstat command is terminated. This value must be a positive integer.
DESCRIPTION¶
The jstat command displays performance statistics for an instrumented Java HotSpot VM. The target JVM is identified by its virtual machine identifier, or vmid option.
The jstat command supports two types of options, general options and output options. General options cause the jstat command to display simple usage and version information. Output options determine the content and format of the statistical output.
All options and their functionality are subject to change or removal in future releases.
GENERAL OPTIONS¶
If you specify one of the general options, then you can't specify any other option or parameter.
OUTPUT OPTIONS FOR THE JSTAT COMMAND¶
If you don't specify a general option, then you can specify output options. Output options determine the content and format of the jstat command's output, and consist of a single statOption, plus any of the other output options (-h, -t, and -J). The statOption must come first.
Output is formatted as a table, with columns that are separated by spaces. A header row with titles describes the columns. Use the -h option to set the frequency at which the header is displayed. Column header names are consistent among the different options. In general, if two options provide a column with the same name, then the data source for the two columns is the same.
Use the -t option to display a time-stamp column, labeled Timestamp as the first column of output. The Timestamp column contains the elapsed time, in seconds, since the target JVM started. The resolution of the time stamp is dependent on various factors and is subject to variation due to delayed thread scheduling on heavily loaded systems.
Use the interval and count parameters to determine how frequently and how many times, respectively, the jstat command displays its output.
Note:
Don't write scripts to parse the jstat command's output because the format might change in future releases. If you write scripts that parse the jstat command output, then expect to modify them for future releases of this tool.
- -statOption
- Determines the statistics information that the jstat command displays. The following lists the available options. Use the -options general option to display the list of options for a particular platform installation. See Stat Options and Output.
- -JjavaOption
- Passes javaOption to the Java application launcher. For example, -J-Xms48m sets the startup memory to 48 MB. For a complete list of options, see java.
STAT OPTIONS AND OUTPUT¶
The following information summarizes the columns that the jstat command outputs for each statOption.
- -class option
- Class loader statistics.
- -compiler option
- Java HotSpot VM Just-in-Time compiler statistics.
- -gc option
- Garbage collected heap statistics.
- -gccapacity option
- Memory pool generation and space capacities.
- -gccause option
- This option displays the same summary of garbage collection statistics as the -gcutil option, but includes the causes of the last garbage collection event and (when applicable), the current garbage collection event. In addition to the columns listed for -gcutil, this option adds the following columns:
- -gcnew option
- New generation statistics.
- -gcnewcapacity option
- New generation space size statistics.
- -gcold option
- Old generation size statistics.
- -gcoldcapacity option
- Old generation statistics.
- -gcmetacapacity option
- Metaspace size statistics.
- -gcutil option
- Summary of garbage collection statistics.
- -printcompilation option
- Java HotSpot VM compiler method statistics.
VIRTUAL MACHINE IDENTIFIER¶
The syntax of the vmid string corresponds to the syntax of a URI:
[protocol:][//]lvmid[@hostname[:port][/servername]
The syntax of the vmid string corresponds to the syntax of a URI. The vmid string can vary from a simple integer that represents a local JVM to a more complex construction that specifies a communications protocol, port number, and other implementation-specific values.
- protocol
- The communications protocol. If the protocol value is omitted and a host name isn't specified, then the default protocol is a platform-specific optimized local protocol. If the protocol value is omitted and a host name is specified, then the default protocol is rmi.
- lvmid
- The local virtual machine identifier for the target JVM. The lvmid is a platform-specific value that uniquely identifies a JVM on a system. The lvmid is the only required component of a virtual machine identifier. The lvmid is typically, but not necessarily, the operating system's process identifier for the target JVM process. You can use the jps command to determine the lvmid provided the JVM processes is not running in a separate docker instance. You can also determine the lvmid on Linux and macOS platforms with the ps command, and on Windows with the Windows Task Manager.
- hostname
- A host name or IP address that indicates the target host. If the hostname value is omitted, then the target host is the local host.
- port
- The default port for communicating with the remote server. If the hostname value is omitted or the protocol value specifies an optimized, local protocol, then the port value is ignored. Otherwise, treatment of the port parameter is implementation-specific. For the default rmi protocol, the port value indicates the port number for the rmiregistry on the remote host. If the port value is omitted and the protocol value indicates rmi, then the default rmiregistry port (1099) is used.
- servername
- The treatment of the servername parameter depends on implementation. For the optimized local protocol, this field is ignored. For the rmi protocol, it represents the name of the RMI remote object on the remote host.
EXAMPLES¶
This section presents some examples of monitoring a local JVM with an lvmid of 21891.
THE GCUTIL OPTION¶
This example attaches to lvmid 21891 and takes 7 samples at 250 millisecond intervals and displays the output as specified by the -gcutil option.
The output of this example shows that a young generation collection occurred between the third and fourth sample. The collection took 0.078 seconds and promoted objects from the eden space (E) to the old space (O), resulting in an increase of old space utilization from 66.80% to 68.19%. Before the collection, the survivor space was 97.02% utilized, but after this collection it's 91.03% utilized.
-
jstat -gcutil 21891 250 7
S0 S1 E O M CCS YGC YGCT FGC FGCT GCT
0.00 97.02 70.31 66.80 95.52 89.14 7 0.300 0 0.000 0.300
0.00 97.02 86.23 66.80 95.52 89.14 7 0.300 0 0.000 0.300
0.00 97.02 96.53 66.80 95.52 89.14 7 0.300 0 0.000 0.300
91.03 0.00 1.98 68.19 95.89 91.24 8 0.378 0 0.000 0.378
91.03 0.00 15.82 68.19 95.89 91.24 8 0.378 0 0.000 0.378
91.03 0.00 17.80 68.19 95.89 91.24 8 0.378 0 0.000 0.378
91.03 0.00 17.80 68.19 95.89 91.24 8 0.378 0 0.000 0.378
REPEAT THE COLUMN HEADER STRING¶
This example attaches to lvmid 21891 and takes samples at 250 millisecond intervals and displays the output as specified by -gcnew option. In addition, it uses the -h3 option to output the column header after every 3 lines of data.
In addition to showing the repeating header string, this example shows that between the second and third samples, a young GC occurred. Its duration was 0.001 seconds. The collection found enough active data that the survivor space 0 utilization (S0U) would have exceeded the desired survivor size (DSS). As a result, objects were promoted to the old generation (not visible in this output), and the tenuring threshold (TT) was lowered from 31 to 2.
Another collection occurs between the fifth and sixth samples. This collection found very few survivors and returned the tenuring threshold to 31.
-
jstat -gcnew -h3 21891 250
S0C S1C S0U S1U TT MTT DSS EC EU YGC YGCT
64.0 64.0 0.0 31.7 31 31 32.0 512.0 178.6 249 0.203
64.0 64.0 0.0 31.7 31 31 32.0 512.0 355.5 249 0.203
64.0 64.0 35.4 0.0 2 31 32.0 512.0 21.9 250 0.204
S0C S1C S0U S1U TT MTT DSS EC EU YGC YGCT
64.0 64.0 35.4 0.0 2 31 32.0 512.0 245.9 250 0.204
64.0 64.0 35.4 0.0 2 31 32.0 512.0 421.1 250 0.204
64.0 64.0 0.0 19.0 31 31 32.0 512.0 84.4 251 0.204
S0C S1C S0U S1U TT MTT DSS EC EU YGC YGCT
64.0 64.0 0.0 19.0 31 31 32.0 512.0 306.7 251 0.204
INCLUDE A TIME STAMP FOR EACH SAMPLE¶
This example attaches to lvmid 21891 and takes 3 samples at 250 millisecond intervals. The -t option is used to generate a time stamp for each sample in the first column.
The Timestamp column reports the elapsed time in seconds since the start of the target JVM. In addition, the -gcoldcapacity output shows the old generation capacity (OGC) and the old space capacity (OC) increasing as the heap expands to meet allocation or promotion demands. The old generation capacity (OGC) has grown from 11,696 KB to 13,820 KB after the eighty-first full garbage collection (FGC). The maximum capacity of the generation (and space) is 60,544 KB (OGCMX), so it still has room to expand.
-
Timestamp OGCMN OGCMX OGC OC YGC FGC FGCT GCT
150.1 1408.0 60544.0 11696.0 11696.0 194 80 2.874 3.799
150.4 1408.0 60544.0 13820.0 13820.0 194 81 2.938 3.863
150.7 1408.0 60544.0 13820.0 13820.0 194 81 2.938 3.863
MONITOR INSTRUMENTATION FOR A REMOTE JVM¶
This example attaches to lvmid 40496 on the system named remote.domain using the -gcutil option, with samples taken every second indefinitely.
The lvmid is combined with the name of the remote host to construct a vmid of 40496@remote.domain. This vmid results in the use of the rmi protocol to communicate to the default jstatd server on the remote host. The jstatd server is located using the rmiregistry command on remote.domain that's bound to the default port of the rmiregistry command (port 1099).
-
jstat -gcutil 40496@remote.domain 1000 ... output omitted
| 2026 | JDK 27-ea |