Book Image

Oracle JRockit: The Definitive Guide

Book Image

Oracle JRockit: The Definitive Guide

Overview of this book

Oracle JRockit is one of the industry’s highest performing Java Virtual Machines. Java developers are always on the lookout for better ways to analyze application behavior and gain performance. As we all know, this is not as easy as it looks. Welcome to JRockit: The Definitive Guide.This book helps you gain in-depth knowledge of Java from the JVM’s point of view. We will explain how to write code that works well with the JVM to gain performance and scalability. Starting with the inner workings of the JRockit JVM and finishing with a thorough walkthrough of the tools in the JRockit Mission Control suite, this book is for anyone who wants to know more about how the JVM executes your Java application and how to profile for better performance.
Table of Contents (23 chapters)
Oracle JRockit
Credits
Foreword
About the Authors
Acknowledgement
About the Reviewers
Preface
12
Using the JRockit Management APIs
Bibliography
Glossary
AST
CAS
HIR
IR
JFR
JMX
JRA
JSR
LIR
MD5
MIR
PDE
RCP
SWT
TLA
Index

Extending the JRockit Mission Control Console


This section is for developers interested in extending the JRockit Mission Control Management Console with custom tabs. It assumes some familiarity with the Eclipse platform and terminology, such as extension point and form page.

There is an extension point available for the console that can be used to implement custom tabs. This extension point was, for instance, used when creating the JConsole plug-in tab available from the JRockit Mission Control experimental update site. See the previous chapter for more information on the experimental update site.

The easiest way to get started building your own JRockit Mission Control Console plug-in is to use the PDE wizard available from the experimental update site. First make sure that Eclipse for RCP/Plug-in Developers (Eclipse 3.5/Ganymede or later versions) is installed. Next install the JRockit Mission Control Plug-in into Eclipse. Finally install the PDE Integration Plug-in from the experimental...