/micrometer-jvm-extras

A set of additional JVM process metrics for micrometer.io.

Primary LanguageJavaApache License 2.0Apache-2.0

micrometer-jvm-extras

A set of additional JVM process metrics for micrometer.io.

Apache License 2 Build status Quality Gate Status Coverage Maven Central

Motivation

  • get "real" memory usage of the JVM beyond its managed parts
  • get ahold of that info from within the JVM in environments where you can't instrument from the outside (e.g. PaaS)

Usage

<dependency>
    <groupId>io.github.mweirauch</groupId>
    <artifactId>micrometer-jvm-extras</artifactId>
    <version>x.y.z</version>
</dependency>
    /* Plain Java */
    final MeterRegistry registry = new SimpleMeterRegistry();
    new ProcessMemoryMetrics().bindTo(registry);
    new ProcessThreadMetrics().bindTo(registry);
    /* With Spring */
    @Bean
    public MeterBinder processMemoryMetrics() {
        return new ProcessMemoryMetrics();
    }

    @Bean
    public MeterBinder processThreadMetrics() {
        return new ProcessThreadMetrics();
    }

Available Metrics

ProcessMemoryMetrics

ProcessMemoryMetrics reads process-level memory information from /proc/self/status. All Meters are reporting in bytes.

Please note that procfs is only available on Linux-based systems.

  • process.memory.vss: Virtual set size. The amount of virtual memory the process can access. Mostly irrelevant, but included for completeness sake.
  • process.memory.rss: Resident set size. The amount of process memory currently in RAM.
  • process.memory.swap: The amount of process memory paged out to swap.

ProcessThreadMetrics

ProcessThreadMetrics reads process-level thread information from /proc/self/status.

Please note that procfs is only available on Linux-based systems.

  • process.threads: The number of process threads as seen by the operating system.
  • process.threads.context.switches.voluntary: The accumulated number of voluntary context switches since application start. A voluntary context switch occurs when a thread is in a waiting or blocked state and the scheduler switches control to another thread.
  • process.threads.context.switches.nonvoluntary: The accumulated number of non-voluntary context switches since application start. An involuntary context switch occurs when a thread consumed the whole time slice it was granted from the scheduler. The thread is suspended and control is switched to another thread.

Notes

  • procfs data is cached for 1000ms in order to relief the filesystem pressure when Meters based on this data are queried by the registry one after another on collection run.
  • Snapshot builds are pushed to Sonatype Nexus Snapshot Repository on successful main builds.