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Jstack - Printing Java Stack Traces

 

Introducing jstack

jstack - print Java stack traces of Java threads for a specified Java process

 

Synopsis

Note: This command is experimental and unsupported.

jstack [options] pid

options

This represents the jstack command-line options. See Options for the jstack Command.

pid

The process ID for which the stack trace is printed. The process must be a Java process. To get a list of Java processes running on a machine, use either the ps command or, if the JVM processes are not running in a separate docker instance.

 

Description

The jstack command prints Java stack traces of Java threads for a specified Java process. For each Java frame, the full class name, method name, byte code index (BCI), and line number, when available, are printed. C++ mangled names aren't demangled. To demangle C++ names, the output of this command can be piped to c++filt. When the specified process is running on a 64-bit JVM, you might need to specify the -J-d64 option, for example: jstack -J-d64 pid.

Note:

This command is unsupported and might not be available in future releases of the JDK. In Windows Systems where the dbgeng.dll file isn't present, the Debugging Tools for Windows must be installed so that these tools work. The PATH environment variable needs to contain the location of the jvm.dll that is used by the target process, or the location from which the core dump file was produced.

 

Options for the jstack Command

-l

The long listing option prints additional information about locks.

-h or -help

Prints a help message.


Last update: September 14, 2021


Previous in the Series
Current Tutorial
Jstack - Printing Java Stack Traces
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Previous in the Series: Jmap - Printing Details of a Process