You can use the following examples:
Measuring Java garbage collection with Prometheus
GarbageCollector statistics is one of the of metrics that the Java/JVM client library exposes.
If you invoke DefaultExports.initialize();
the Java client will expose a number of out of the box JVM metrics:
- memory pools
- memory allocations
- buffer pools
- threads
- JVM version
- loaded classes
- garbage collection
The GarbageCollector statistics comes from GarbageCollectorMXBean, and is exposed as the jvm_gc_collection_seconds
summary.
In particular, jvm_gc_collection_seconds_count
is responsible for the number of GCs, and jvm_gc_collection_seconds_sum
deals with for how long they were taken.
These are counters, so we can take a rate:
We can see that PS Scavenge
is happening once every 2 seconds or so, and PS MarkSweek
is rare. You can have a question which of those are the young generation and which the old/tenured, but this is not something the JVM exposes so you have to know this in your setup given the name.
A GC every 2 seconds sounds excessive, and you can check how long it takes:
They are only taking about 1.5ms on average, which is acceptable. The single PS MarkSweek
takes 45ms, but they are rare.
Finally, using rate(jvm_gc_collection_seconds_sum[1m])
you can see what proportion of time each type of GC is taking up, which per the previous numbers is under 0.1% so not a concern at all.