When observing a StackOverflowError how to retrieve the full call stack?
Consider this simple example:
public class Overflow {
public Overflow() {
new Overflow();
}
public static void a() {
new Overflow();
}
public static void main(String[] argv) {
a();
}
}
Now the error reported is:
Exception in thread "main" java.lang.StackOverflowError
at Overflow.<init>(Overflow.java:11)
[last line repeated many times]
But I can't see the main
and a
method in the stack trace. My guess is this is because of overflow, the newest entry on the stack replaces the oldest one (?).
Now, how to get the a
and main
stack entries in the output?
The background is I get the a StackOverflowError (but that's not an infinite recursion, because it doesn't happen when increasing stack size) and it's hard to spot the problem in the code. I only get the multiple lines from java.util.regex.Pattern
but not the information what code called that. The application is too complicated to set a breakpoint on each call to Pattern
s.
The JVM has an artificial limit of 1024 entries that you can have in the stack trace of an Exception or Error, probably to save memory when it occurs (since the VM has to allocate memory to store the stack trace).
Fortunately, there is a flag that allows to increase this limit. Just run your program with the following argument:
-XX:MaxJavaStackTraceDepth=1000000
This will print up to 1 million entries of your stack trace, which should be more than enough. It is also possible to set this value at 0
to set the number of entries as unlimited.
This list of non-standard JVM options gives more details:
Max. no. of lines in the stack trace for Java exceptions (0 means all). With Java > 1.6, value 0 really means 0. value -1 or any negative number must be specified to print all the stack (tested with 1.6.0_22, 1.7.0 on Windows). With Java <= 1.5, value 0 means everything, JVM chokes on negative number (tested with 1.5.0_22 on Windows).
Running the sample of the question with this flag gives the following result:
Exception in thread "main" java.lang.StackOverflowError
at Overflow.<init>(Overflow.java:3)
at Overflow.<init>(Overflow.java:4)
at Overflow.<init>(Overflow.java:4)
at Overflow.<init>(Overflow.java:4)
(more than ten thousand lines later:)
at Overflow.<init>(Overflow.java:4)
at Overflow.<init>(Overflow.java:4)
at Overflow.a(Overflow.java:7)
at Overflow.main(Overflow.java:10)
This way, you can find the original callers of the code that threw the Error, even if the actual stack trace is more than 1024 lines long.
If you can not use that option, there is still another way, if you are in a recursive function like this, and if you can modify it. If you add the following try-catch:
public Overflow() {
try {
new Overflow();
}
catch(StackOverflowError e) {
StackTraceElement[] stackTrace = e.getStackTrace();
// if the stack trace length is at the limit , throw a new StackOverflowError, which will have one entry less in it.
if (stackTrace.length == 1024) {
throw new StackOverflowError();
}
throw e; // if it is small enough, just rethrow it.
}
}
Essentially, this will create and throw a new StackOverflowError
, discarding the last entry because each one will be sent one level up compared to the previous one (this can take a few seconds, because all these Errors have to be created). When the stack trace will be reduced to 1023 elements, it is simply rethrown.
Ultimately this will print the 1023 lines at the bottom of the stack trace, which is not the complete stack trace, but is probably the most useful part of it.
As far as I know, it's not possible to get the full stack trace (however, I don't really know why).
However, what you could do to track down the problem, is to manually check for the stack depth in your affected code like this:
StackTraceElement[] trace = Thread.currentThread().getStackTrace();
if (trace.length > SOME_VALUE) {
// trigger some diagnostic action, print a stack trace or have a breakpoint here
}
SOME_VALUE
would need to be found by experimentation (high enough to not be triggered in "good" situations and low enough to not be unreachable). Of course this would slow down your code and should only be used for debugging the problem.
Update: I seem to have missed that the problem occurs in Pattern
, which complicates matters. However, you could use a conditional method breakpoint at one of the Pattern
methods in the stack trace with a condition like this (the actual value might need tweaking):
Thread.currentThread().getStackTrace().length > 300
This way you can find your own code at the bottom of the stack when you hit the breakpoint.
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