Important: This documentation is about an older version. It's relevant only to the release noted, many of the features and functions have been updated or replaced. Please view the current version.
pyroscope.java
pyroscope.java
continuously profiles Java processes running on the local Linux OS using async-profiler.
Note
To use thepyroscope.java
component you must run Alloy as root and inside host PID namespace.
Usage
pyroscope.java "LABEL" {
targets = TARGET_LIST
forward_to = RECEIVER_LIST
}
Target JVM configuration
When you use pyroscope.java
to profile Java applications, you can configure the target JVMs with some command line flags that ensure accurate profiling, especially for inlined methods. Add the following flags to your Java application’s startup command:
-XX:+UnlockDiagnosticVMOptions -XX:+DebugNonSafepoints
For more details, refer to Restrictions/Limitations in the async-profiler documentation.
Additional Configuration for Linux Capabilities
If your Kubernetes environment has Linux capabilities enabled, configure the following in your Helm values to ensure pyroscope.java
functions properly:
alloy:
securityContext:
runAsUser: 0
runAsNonRoot: false
capabilities:
add:
- PERFMON
- SYS_PTRACE
- SYS_RESOURCE
- SYS_ADMIN
These capabilities enable Alloy to access performance monitoring subsystems, trace processes, override resource limits, and perform necessary system administration tasks for profiling.
Note
Adjust capabilities based on your specific security requirements and environment, following the principle of least privilege. The capability behavior depends on Container Runtime Interface (CRI) settings. For example, in Docker, capabilities that are not on the allowlist are dropped by default.
Arguments
The following arguments are supported:
Name | Type | Description | Default | Required |
---|---|---|---|---|
targets | list(map(string)) | List of java process targets to profile. | yes | |
forward_to | list(ProfilesReceiver) | List of receivers to send collected profiles to. | yes | |
tmp_dir | string | Temporary directory to store async-profiler. | /tmp | no |
Profiling behavior
The special label __process_pid__
must always be present in each target of targets
and corresponds to the PID
of the process to profile.
After component startup, pyroscope.java
creates a temporary directory under tmp_dir
and extracts the async-profiler binaries for both glibc and musl into the directory with the following layout.
/tmp/alloy-asprof-glibc-{SHA1}/bin/asprof
/tmp/alloy-asprof-glibc-{SHA1}/lib/libasyncProfiler.so
/tmp/alloy-asprof-musl-{SHA1}/bin/asprof
/tmp/alloy-asprof-musl-{SHA1}/lib/libasyncProfiler.so
After process profiling startup, the component detects libc type and copies according libAsyncProfiler.so
into the target process file system at the exact same path.
Note
Theasprof
binary runs with root permissions. If you change thetmp_dir
configuration to something other than/tmp
, then you must ensure that the directory is only writable by root.
targets
argument
The special __process_pid__
label must always be present and corresponds to the process PID that’s used for profiling.
Labels starting with a double underscore (__
) are treated as internal, and are removed prior to scraping.
The special label service_name
is required and must always be present.
If it’s not specified, pyroscope.scrape
will attempt to infer it from either of the following sources, in this order:
__meta_kubernetes_pod_annotation_pyroscope_io_service_name
which is apyroscope.io/service_name
pod annotation.__meta_kubernetes_namespace
and__meta_kubernetes_pod_container_name
__meta_docker_container_name
__meta_dockerswarm_container_label_service_name
or__meta_dockerswarm_service_name
If service_name
isn’t specified and couldn’t be inferred, then it’s set to unspecified
.
Blocks
The following blocks are supported inside the definition of pyroscope.java
:
Hierarchy | Block | Description | Required |
---|---|---|---|
profiling_config | profiling_config | Describes java profiling configuration. | no |
profiling_config block
The profiling_config
block describes how async-profiler is invoked.
The following arguments are supported:
Name | Type | Description | Default | Required |
---|---|---|---|---|
interval | duration | How frequently to collect profiles from the targets. | “60s” | no |
cpu | bool | A flag to enable cpu profiling, using itimer async-profiler event by default. | true | no |
sample_rate | int | CPU profiling sample rate. It is converted from Hz to interval and passed as an -i arg to async-profiler. | 100 | no |
alloc | string | Allocation profiling sampling configuration It is passed as an --alloc arg to async-profiler. | “512k” | no |
lock | string | Lock profiling sampling configuration. It is passed as an --lock arg to async-profiler. | “10ms” | no |
event | string | Sets the CPU profiling event. Can be one of itimer , cpu or wall . | “itimer” | no |
per_thread | bool | Sets per thread mode on async profiler. It is passed as an -t arg to async-profiler. | false | no |
Refer to profiler-options for more information about async-profiler configuration.
event
argument
Sets the CPU profiling event:
itimer
- Default. Uses thesetitimer(ITIMER_PROF)
syscall, which generates a signal every time a process consumes CPU.cpu
- Uses PMU-case sampling (like Intel PEBS or AMD IBS), can be more accurate thanitimer
, but it’s not available on every platform.wall
- This samples all threads equally every given period of time regardless of thread status: Running, Sleeping, or Blocked. For example, this can be helpful when profiling application start-up time or IO-intensive processes.
per_thread
argument
Sets per thread mode on async profiler. Threads are profiled separately and each stack trace will end with a frame that denotes a single thread.
The Wall-clock profiler (event=wall
) is most useful in per-thread mode.
Exported fields
pyroscope.java
doesn’t export any fields that can be referenced by other components.
Component health
pyroscope.java
is only reported as unhealthy when given an invalid configuration.
In those cases, exported fields retain their last healthy values.
Debug information
pyroscope.java
doesn’t expose any component-specific debug information.
Debug metrics
pyroscope.java
doesn’t expose any component-specific debug metrics.
Examples
Profile every java process on the current host
pyroscope.write "staging" {
endpoint {
url = "http://localhost:4040"
}
}
discovery.process "all" {
refresh_interval = "60s"
discover_config {
cwd = true
exe = true
commandline = true
username = true
uid = true
container_id = true
}
}
discovery.relabel "java" {
targets = discovery.process.all.targets
rule {
action = "keep"
regex = ".*/java$"
source_labels = ["__meta_process_exe"]
}
}
pyroscope.java "java" {
targets = discovery.relabel.java.output
forward_to = [pyroscope.write.staging.receiver]
profiling_config {
interval = "60s"
alloc = "512k"
cpu = true
sample_rate = 100
lock = "1ms"
}
}
Compatible components
pyroscope.java
can accept arguments from the following components:
- Components that export Targets
- Components that export Pyroscope
ProfilesReceiver
Note
Connecting some components may not be sensible or components may require further configuration to make the connection work correctly. Refer to the linked documentation for more details.