RFR: 8308995: Update Network IO JFR events to be static mirror events
Daniel Fuchs
dfuchs at openjdk.org
Thu Jun 22 11:57:04 UTC 2023
On Tue, 6 Jun 2023 19:39:31 GMT, Tim Prinzing <tprinzing at openjdk.org> wrote:
> The socket read/write JFR events currently use instrumentation of java.base code using templates in the jdk.jfr modules. This results in some java.base code residing in the jdk.jfr module which is undesirable.
>
> JDK19 added static support for event classes. The old instrumentor classes should be replaced with mirror events using the static support.
>
> In the java.base module:
> Added two new events, jdk.internal.event.SocketReadEvent and jdk.internal.event.SocketWriteEvent.
> java.net.Socket and sun.nio.ch.SocketChannelImpl were changed to make use of the new events.
>
> In the jdk.jfr module:
> jdk.jfr.events.SocketReadEvent and jdk.jfr.events.SocketWriteEvent were changed to be mirror events.
> In the package jdk.jfr.internal.instrument, the classes SocketChannelImplInstrumentor, SocketInputStreamInstrumentor, and SocketOutputStreamInstrumentor were removed. The JDKEvents class was updated to reflect all of those changes.
>
> The existing tests in test/jdk/jdk/jfr/event/io continue to pass with the new implementation:
> Passed: jdk/jfr/event/io/TestSocketChannelEvents.java
> Passed: jdk/jfr/event/io/TestSocketEvents.java
>
> I added a micro benchmark which measures the overhead of handling the jfr socket events.
> test/micro/org/openjdk/bench/java/net/SocketEventOverhead.java.
> It needs access the jdk.internal.event package, which is done at runtime with annotations that add the extra arguments.
> At compile time the build arguments had to be augmented in make/test/BuildMicrobenchmark.gmk
The new code seems to accurately correspond to what the various `*Instrumentor` classes were doing, so that is good. I agree with Alan that potential exception that may arise when generating the event are an issue (e.g. call to getRemoteAddress() or other getter that may make a check on the socket state) - though that was already present in the original code. Maybe that could be fixed here though.
In cases where the implRead/implWrite call throws an exception, shouldn't the event contain that exception, or at least exception message? If it doesn't should it be emitted at all, or should another event be emitted instead?
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PR Comment: https://git.openjdk.org/jdk/pull/14342#issuecomment-1602505386
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