jstack − Stack Trace |
jstack [ option ] pid jstack [ option ] executable core jstack [ option ] [server−id@]remote−hostname−or−IP |
Options are mutually exclusive. Option, if used, should follow immediately after the command name. See OPTIONS. |
pid |
process id for which the stack trace is to be printed. The process must be a Java process. To get a list of Java processes running on a machine, jps may be used. |
executable |
Java executable from which the core dump was produced. |
core |
core file for which the stack trace is to be printed. |
remote−hostname−or−IP |
remote debug server’s (see jsadebugd) hostname or IP address. |
server−id |
optional unique id, if multiple debug servers are running on the same remote host. |
jstack prints Java stack traces of Java threads for a given Java process or core file or a remote debug server. For each Java frame, the full class name, method name, ’bci’ (byte code index) and line number, if available, are printed. With the −m option, jstack prints both Java and native frames of all threads along with the ’pc’ (program counter). For each native frame, the closest native symbol to ’pc’, if available, is printed. C++ mangled names are not demangled. To demangle C++ names, the output of this command may be piped to c++filt. If the given process is running on a 64−bit VM, you may need to specify the −J−d64 option, e.g.: |
jstack −J−d64 −m pid |
NOTE − This utility is unsupported and may or may not be available in future versions of the JDK. The only form of jstack that is available on Windows platforms is jstack pid |
−F |
Forces a stack dump when ’jstack pid’ does not respond. |
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−m |
prints mixed mode (both Java and native C/C++ frames) stack trace. |
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−h |
prints a help message. |
−help |
prints a help message |
o |
pstack(1) |
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o |
c++filt(1) |
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o |
jps |
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o |
jsadebugd |
Mixed mode stack trace, the −m option, does not work with the remote debug server. |