Java 7 has been out for a while now, but I cannot find any good resources on the configuration of the garbage collectors, specifically the new G1 collector.
My questions:
- Is G1 the default collector in Java 7 and if not how do I activate G1?
- What optional settings does g1 have in Java7?
- Were there any changes made to other collectors like cms or the parallel collector in Java 7?
- Where can I find good documentation on garbage collection in Java 7?
The G1 garbage collector is not the default in my installation of Java, version 1.7.0_01. You can see for yourself by using with some extra command line options:
You don't need to enable experimental options to turn on the G1 collector any more, though:
I don't know where you can find any good documentation.
G1 is not default collector in Java 7.
-XX:+UseG1GC
will enable G1GCThere are many. Have a look at this oracle article for complete information.
Due to this reason, customize critical parameters
and leave all other parameters to default value.
Here is a list of important options and their default values. This list applies to the latest Java HotSpot VM, build 24. You can adapt and tune the G1 GC settings on the JVM command line.
Important Defaults:
Sets the size of a G1 region. The value will be a power of two and can range from 1MB to 32MB. The goal is to have around 2048 regions based on the minimum Java heap size.
Sets a target value for desired maximum pause time. The default value is 200 milliseconds. The specified value does not adapt to your heap size.
Sets the percentage of the heap to use as the minimum for the young generation size. The default value is 5 percent of your Java heap.
Sets the percentage of the heap size to use as the maximum for young generation size. The default value is 60 percent of your Java heap.
Sets the value of the STW worker threads. Sets the value of n to the number of logical processors. The value of n is the same as the number of logical processors up to a value of 8.
If there are more than eight logical processors, sets the value of n to approximately 5/8 of the logical processors. This works in most cases except for larger SPARC systems where the value of n can be approximately 5/16 of the logical processors.
Sets the number of parallel marking threads. Sets n to approximately 1/4 of the number of parallel garbage collection threads (ParallelGCThreads).
Sets the Java heap occupancy threshold that triggers a marking cycle. The default occupancy is 45 percent of the entire Java heap.
Sets the occupancy threshold for an old region to be included in a mixed garbage collection cycle. The default occupancy is 65 percent
Sets the percentage of heap that you are willing to waste. The Java HotSpot VM does not initiate the mixed garbage collection cycle when the reclaimable percentage is less than the heap waste percentage
Sets the target number of mixed garbage collections after a marking cycle to collect old regions with at most G1MixedGCLIveThresholdPercent live data. The default is 8 mixed garbage collections
Sets an upper limit on the number of old regions to be collected during a mixed garbage collection cycle. The default is 10 percent of the Java heap
Sets the percentage of reserve memory to keep free so as to reduce the risk of to-space overflows. The default is 10 percent. When you increase or decrease the percentage, make sure to adjust the total Java heap by the same amount.
You have re-configured many G1GC parameters, which are not required if you follow above documentation page. Please cross check with above recommendations especially on ParallelGCThreads and ConcGCThreads, which are to be based on your CPU cores. Remove re-configuration of un-necessary parameters.
Recommendations from oracle:
When you evaluate and fine-tune G1 GC, keep the following recommendations in mind:
Young Generation Size: Avoid explicitly setting young generation size with the
-Xmn
option or any or other related option such as-XX:NewRatio
. Fixing the size of the young generation overrides the target pause-time goal.Pause Time Goals: When you evaluate or tune any garbage collection, there is always a latency versus throughput trade-off. The G1 GC is an incremental garbage collector with uniform pauses, but also more overhead on the application threads. The throughput goal for the G1 GC is 90 percent application time and 10 percent garbage collection time.
There are some changes with Java 7. Have a look at this article
Refer to oracle documentation page about gc and related SE question:
Java G1 garbage collection in production
The documentation available at http://www.oracle.com/technetwork/java/javase/tech/g1-intro-jsp-135488.html (the link provided by Wojtek) seems to be the only official link with info but the info seems outdated as some of the flags mentioned there were only available in the test builds, they no longer exist in the production releases. Some one from Oracle should provide some updated documentation on the G1 GC.
1. Is G1 the default collector in Java 7 (...)
The rule on this Java 5 page is still applicable in Java 7 (and AFAIK, Java 8):
But also consider:
-client
VM, so are always "server class"For example, if on Windows x64 you run...
1. (...) how do I activate G1?
As of Java 7, simply
-XX:+UseG1GC
. Perhaps also of interest is when you would want to:2. What optional settings does g1 have in Java7?
I've not used G1 myself, but I gather that it adheres to the same basic "throughput / ergonomic" flags used to tune the other parallel collectors. In my experience with the Parallel GC,
-XX:GCTimeRatio
has been the pivotal one in providing the expected speed-memory tradeoff. YMMV.G1-specific options are listed here
3. Were there changes to (...) cms or the parallel collector in Java 7?
Don't know, but...
4. Where can I find good documentation on garbage collection in Java 7?
It can be a pain to find, can't it? Probably the best "hub" page I've found is this one:
http://www.oracle.com/technetwork/java/javase/tech/index-jsp-140228.html
Some deep reading required, but worth the time if you need to do some tuning. Particularly insightful is: Garbage Collector Ergonomics
Oracle finally made G1 official in Java 7 U4: http://www.oracle.com/technetwork/java/javase/7u4-relnotes-1575007.html
Description: http://docs.oracle.com/javase/7/docs/technotes/guides/vm/G1.html
Command line options: http://www.oracle.com/technetwork/java/javase/tech/vmoptions-jsp-140102.html#G1Options
Still, I do not think it is the default collector in Java 7. For servers the default is the Parallel Collector as in Java 6.
Yes, G1 is the new standard garbage collector in Java 1.7 JVM.
Here you can find plenty of information on how to use and configre the new garbage collector:
I have also found this article very helpful in understanding the inners of G1.
Even more info here.