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/*
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* Copyright 2001-2008 Sun Microsystems, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
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* DO NOT ALTER OR REMOVE COPYRIGHT NOTICES OR THIS FILE HEADER.
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*
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* This code is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
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* under the terms of the GNU General Public License version 2 only, as
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* published by the Free Software Foundation.
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*
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* This code is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT
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* ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or
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* FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License
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* version 2 for more details (a copy is included in the LICENSE file that
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* accompanied this code).
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*
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* You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License version
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* 2 along with this work; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation,
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* Inc., 51 Franklin St, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA.
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*
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* Please contact Sun Microsystems, Inc., 4150 Network Circle, Santa Clara,
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* CA 95054 USA or visit www.sun.com if you need additional information or
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* have any questions.
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*
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*/
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/*
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* PerfData Version Constants
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* - Major Version - change whenever the structure of PerfDataEntry changes
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* - Minor Version - change whenever the data within the PerfDataEntry
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* structure changes. for example, new unit or variability
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* values are added or new PerfData subtypes are added.
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*/
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#define PERFDATA_MAJOR_VERSION 2
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#define PERFDATA_MINOR_VERSION 0
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/* Byte order of the PerfData memory region. The byte order is exposed in
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* the PerfData memory region as the data in the memory region may have
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* been generated by a little endian JVM implementation. Tracking the byte
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* order in the PerfData memory region allows Java applications to adapt
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* to the native byte order for monitoring purposes. This indicator is
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* also useful when a snapshot of the PerfData memory region is shipped
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* to a machine with a native byte order different from that of the
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* originating machine.
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*/
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#define PERFDATA_BIG_ENDIAN 0
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#define PERFDATA_LITTLE_ENDIAN 1
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/*
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* The PerfDataPrologue structure is known by the PerfDataBuffer Java class
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* libraries that read the PerfData memory region. The size and the position
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* of the fields must be changed along with their counterparts in the
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* PerfDataBuffer Java class. The first four bytes of this structure
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* should never change, or compatibility problems between the monitoring
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* applications and Hotspot VMs will result. The reserved fields are
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* available for future enhancements.
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*/
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typedef struct {
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jint magic; // magic number - 0xcafec0c0
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jbyte byte_order; // byte order of the buffer
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jbyte major_version; // major and minor version numbers
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jbyte minor_version;
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jbyte accessible; // ready to access
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jint used; // number of PerfData memory bytes used
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jint overflow; // number of bytes of overflow
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jlong mod_time_stamp; // time stamp of last structural modification
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jint entry_offset; // offset of the first PerfDataEntry
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jint num_entries; // number of allocated PerfData entries
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} PerfDataPrologue;
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/* The PerfDataEntry structure defines the fixed portion of an entry
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* in the PerfData memory region. The PerfDataBuffer Java libraries
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* are aware of this structure and need to be changed when this
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* structure changes.
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*/
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typedef struct {
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jint entry_length; // entry length in bytes
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jint name_offset; // offset of the data item name
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jint vector_length; // length of the vector. If 0, then scalar
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jbyte data_type; // type of the data item -
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// 'B','Z','J','I','S','C','D','F','V','L','['
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jbyte flags; // flags indicating misc attributes
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jbyte data_units; // unit of measure for the data type
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jbyte data_variability; // variability classification of data type
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jint data_offset; // offset of the data item
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/*
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body of PerfData memory entry is variable length
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jbyte[name_length] data_name; // name of the data item
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jbyte[pad_length] data_pad; // alignment of data item
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j<data_type>[data_length] data_item; // array of appropriate types.
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// data_length is > 1 only when the
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// data_type is T_ARRAY.
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*/
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} PerfDataEntry;
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// Prefix of performance data file.
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extern const char PERFDATA_NAME[];
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// UINT_CHARS contains the number of characters holding a process id
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// (i.e. pid). pid is defined as unsigned "int" so the maximum possible pid value
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// would be 2^32 - 1 (4294967295) which can be represented as a 10 characters
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// string.
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static const size_t UINT_CHARS = 10;
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/* the PerfMemory class manages creation, destruction,
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* and allocation of the PerfData region.
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*/
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class PerfMemory : AllStatic {
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friend class VMStructs;
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private:
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static char* _start;
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static char* _end;
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static char* _top;
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static size_t _capacity;
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static PerfDataPrologue* _prologue;
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static jint _initialized;
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static void create_memory_region(size_t sizep);
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static void delete_memory_region();
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public:
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enum PerfMemoryMode {
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PERF_MODE_RO = 0,
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PERF_MODE_RW = 1
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};
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static char* alloc(size_t size);
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static char* start() { return _start; }
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static char* end() { return _end; }
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static size_t used() { return (size_t) (_top - _start); }
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static size_t capacity() { return _capacity; }
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static bool is_initialized() { return _initialized != 0; }
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static bool contains(char* addr) {
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return ((_start != NULL) && (addr >= _start) && (addr < _end));
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}
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static void mark_updated();
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// methods for attaching to and detaching from the PerfData
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// memory segment of another JVM process on the same system.
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static void attach(const char* user, int vmid, PerfMemoryMode mode,
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char** addrp, size_t* size, TRAPS);
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static void detach(char* addr, size_t bytes, TRAPS);
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static void initialize();
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static void destroy();
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static void set_accessible(bool value) {
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if (UsePerfData) {
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_prologue->accessible = value;
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}
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}
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// filename of backing store or NULL if none.
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static char* backing_store_filename();
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// returns the complete file path of hsperfdata.
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// the caller is expected to free the allocated memory.
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static char* get_perfdata_file_path();
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};
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void perfMemory_init();
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void perfMemory_exit();
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