Java Application Profiling Using TPTP: Eclipse Corner Article

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 Copyright © 2006 International Business Machines Corp.


 Eclipse Corner Article

Java Application Profiling using TPTP


Summary 

The Eclipse Test & Performance Tools Platform (TPTP) Profiling tool can be used to profile Eclipse plug-
ins, local Java(TM) applications or complex applications running on multiple hosts and different platforms.
The tool is tightly integrated with Eclipse, allowing profiling of applications running from within Eclipse. 
This article demonstrates how to use the TPTP Profiling tool to profile a Java application for identifying
execution related hot spots. It shows how to start the profiling session, use the various TPTP views to
analyze the data, identify methods with high execution time then jump to the source code to fix the
performance problem.

By Valentina Popescu, IBM

February 21, 2006 (updated July 11, 2006)

Profiling an Application
In the current environment of short development cycles for delivering a product, developers tend to focus
more on the functional aspects of application execution, mostly via testing, debugging, and code fixing.
However, many problems do not easily surface until the application is running in production mode, 24
hours a day, 7 days a week and gets pushed to limits during some unexpected peak periods. 

The kinds of performance problems encountered in production cannot be discovered during a debugging
session. Before deployed and run in production mode, it is important to use a Profiling tool to analyze
application execution and identify performance problems, such as execution bottlenecks, object leaks,
and system resource limitations.
This article provides an introduction to the TPTP Profiling tool. It demonstrates how to use the TPTP
Profiling tool to profile a Java application in order to identify performance hot spots, and fix and validate
performance problems.

TPTP Profiling Tool


The Eclipse Test & Performance Tools Platform (TPTP) Project offers a profiling tool for identifying and
isolating performance problems such as performance bottlenecks, object leaks and system resource
limits. The tool targets applications of all levels of complexity, from simple standalone Java applications to
Eclipse plug-ins or complex enterprise applications running on multiple machines and on different
platforms. 

Being tightly integrated with the Eclipse project, the tool is also easy to use and extend. That means that
users can plug in their preferred views to analyze the data, or can extend the data collection metaphor by
implementing their own flavor of data collection agent.

This article was written using the TPTP 4.2.0 based on the EMF 2.2.0 and XSD 2.2.0 release builds,
which require Eclipse 3.2.0. You can download these drivers from here. For TPTP 4.2.0 installation
details go to the TPTP download page.

Profiling a Java application using TPTP


The product catalog sample used in this article is a simple Java application that parses product
information stored in separate xml files and prints the result to the console output. The file system location
for the folder containing the product xml files is passed as a program argument when running the main
class, Product.java. The xml files containing the product information are provided under the
section running the example.

Starting the application in profiling mode

After installing the sample application, the first step is to run the product catalog application in profiling
mode. Profile the application by using the Profile As > Java Application popup-menu on the Product class
as seen in the image below. 
Figure 1 Profile the Product catalog Application

Another way of starting the application in profiling mode is to use the Profile action available on
the Java perspective's toolbar menu. Similar to the Run and Debug toolbar actions, the Profile  action will
open the launch configuration dialog and from there you can select the type of application you want to
profile.
  

Setting the Java program arguments

The Profile As > Java Application action will open the launch configuration wizard as displayed by Figure
2.
For this example, the folder containing the product xml files is passed as a program argument. As
described in the Figure 2 below, set the program arguments to be x:\myPath\products,
where x:\myPath  is the path where you have unzipped the folder containing the product xml files provided
at the end of this article.

Figure 2 Product catalog sample - program arguments

Setting profiling filters

The next step is to set the profiling options to collect method execution information.
To set these options, click the Monitor tab on the Launch Configuration Properties wizard and select a set
of profiling options that fits with your performance investigation.
A Profiling filter set is a reusable set of profiling filters. The purpose of creating profiling filter
sets is to reuse them during consecutive runs of the same application or to share them between
applications that require the same type of profiling information.
The steps below describe how to create a new filter set used to profile the Product catalog application.
We will be creating a new filter set named ProductFilterSet which will be used to profile only packages
that have the com.sample.product prefix.

1. Choose to collect execution details by selecting the Execution Time Analysis option in the Monitor tab. 

Figure 3 Execution Time Analysis option

As shown in Figure 3 above we have selected the Execution Time Analysis option that can be used
during consecutive runs of the product catalog application. On the next run of this application, the Setting
Profiling Filters step can be skipped.

2. Select Edit Options action to set the profiling execution options.

2a. Select the "Collect boundary classes excluded by the filter set" option and enter 3 as the Boundary
class depth value.
By selecting this option, you specify that you want to collect information for methods invoked to the
specified depth starting with the methods in your filter criteria.

As an example, let's assume that we have set the filter to collect information on method MyMethod
and to filter out methods M1, M2, M3, M4.

If the following invocation stack is executed: MyMethod > M1 > M2 > M3 > M4 ( MyMethod invokes
M1 which invokes M2 which invokes M3 which invokes M4 ), based on the filtering criteria selected
at point 2a, the profiler will show this call stack: MyMethod > M1 > M2 > M3 and will not display the
last invocation M3 > M4 (since this exceeds the specified depth of 3).

Figure 4 Choose to collect execution information

3. Select the classes to be profiled. 

     In the Monitor tab, select the Java Profiling item and double click or select Edit Options action. The
Filter Set wizard opens.
Use the Filter Set page to choose the classes you want to profile. There are a set of predefined filters
available but for this sample you will create a new filter set named ProductFilterSet which filters out
everything except packages prefixed by com.sample.product.
Follow these steps to create the filter set:

3a) Select the Add... action from the filter set list. In the result dialog enter ProductFilterSet as the
name of the new filter then click OK

3b) Use the Add... button from the Contents of selected filter set list to create the two filters as shown
in Figure 5.

Figure 5 Choose classes you want to profile

Run the application


Run the Product catalog application by pressing OK on the Launch Configuration wizard. Choose Yes
when asked to switch to the Profiling and Logging perspective.
You should see the result of the program execution in the Console view, similar with what is presented in
Figure 6 below. 

Figure 6 Product catalog application has been executed

 The TPTP profiling tool allows you to interact with your profiled application. You can pause
and resume monitoring, run garbage collection on the profiled application, collect object references or
terminate the application.
Identify performance hot spots using the Execution Statistics view

Use the Execution Statistics view to identify performance hot spots. To open this view, select the  process
in the  Profiling Monitor view and select Open with > Execution Statistics pop-up action.
The Execution Statistic view shown in the Figure 7 below display the methods executed, sorted by
cumulative time. The cumulative time for a method is the time spent to execute that method, including any
invocations to other methods.

Figure 7 Execution Statistics View

As presented in Figure 4, the Execution Statistics shows the main(java.lang.String[]),


readData(java.lang.String) and createParser() methods as the top three methods with the highest
execution time. It is not surprising to see the main and readData methods on this list since the first one is
the starting point of the application execution while the second as suggested by it's name, is reading the
products data from the xml files.

What comes as a surprise for us is the fact that createParser() method, which just creates a SAX parser
instance used to parse the xml files, has such a high execution time. The execution time for this method
accounts for 42.96% of the application's total execution time. The Execution Statistics have helped us to
identify this method as a potential place to optimize the application's performance.

Once we have identified this, let's drill down and see the createParser() method's execution details. 

Open Method Invocation Details view on the createParser() method

We will use next the Method Invocation Details view to see what methods in the createParser() call stack
are responsible for the method's slow execution time. Open the Method Invocation Details view by
double-click on the createParser() method in the Execution Statistics view.
Figure 8 Method Invocation Details view

Figure 8 below presents the execution information for the createParser() method. As you can see the
method has been invoked once by the readData(java.lang.String) method and invokes 5 different
methods. In the invoked methods table you can see that newSAXParser() and newInstance() methods
are responsible for the createParser's method slow execution. These two methods were called 24 times,
as the createParser() method has been executed 24 times.
Define a solution for the identified performance problem

By analyzing this data, we found that one way to improve the createParser() execution time is to improve
the execution of the two SAXParserFactory methods. Since we have no control over these methods'
implementation, the only way to improve our application execution is to reduce the number of calls we
make to these methods.

The solution is to create one parser instance and reuse it for parsing all xml files, instead of creating a
new parser for every file. Let's open the source code and apply the fix.

Before making any such optimizations, make sure that they are supported by the code. For
example, while the SAXParser cannot be simultaneously used by multiple threads, instances can be
reused. Strictly speaking, instances should be reset()before they are reused. It is also a good idea to
have a comprehensive set of unit tests in place before you make changes to code that could possibly
introduce changes in behavior.

Open the source code and apply the performance fix

To open the source code for the createParser() method, select the method in the Method Invocation
Details view then right-click and choose the Open Source action on the pop-up menu.
Figure 9 Source code

Figure 9 shows the createParser() source code. Notice that the method creates a new SAX parser
instance on every call.
Update the source code as presented in Figure 10 below so that the code will create only one parser
instance and reuse it when parsing every xml file.
Figure 10 Source code fix

As presented in Figure 10, the performance fix defines a global SAXParser instance. The createParser()
method initializes the parser and returns this instance every time the method is called.

Let's go back now and validate the fix by running the Product catalog application in profiling mode once
again.

Validate the performance fix


To validate the performance fix, select the Product  class in the Java perspective and as described above,
right-click and choose Profile As > Java Application.

The Profiling options wizard will not open again as the previous profiling options will be used to run the
application. After the application is executed, open the Execution Statistics view and compare the
execution time.
Figure 11 shows the execution times after the fix has been applied to the code:

Figure 11 Execution Statistics view

As you can see in the image above, the createParser() execution time is now only 19% of the application
execution, while before the performance fix has been applied to the code, the createParser() execution
time was almost 43% of the application execution time.
Note that this improvement will prove to be even more valuable as the number of xml files to be parsed
increases, so the fix will reduce the application execution time exponential as more product files are being
added to the catalog.

Conclusion
This article has shown how the TPTP profiling tool can be used to identify and solve performance
problems. There are more aspects of the TPTP tool not covered by this article. If you would like to know
more about the tool's capabilities, there are a set of  tutorial slides and User Guides available here.

Running the example


The file "ProductCatalog_example.zip" contains the complete source code for the example in this article.
Extract the content of the ZIP file into the Eclipse "plugins" directory. You will also need the list of product
xml files which are stored in the products.zip file. Extract the content of the products.zip file to a desired
location on your file system and use this path as a program argument when running the Product catalog
application.

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