JDK 9: An Introduction to StackWalker
StackWalker is an API for stack walking that allows easy filtering of, and lazy access to, the information in stack traces.
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Join For FreeStackWalker has been introduced in JDK9 as JEP-259. The concepts in this article are taken from JEP-259.
StackWalker gives the snapshot of the stack trace of the current thread at any given point of time and has methods to walk over it. Benefits of using StackWalker over Thread::getStackTrace() (prior to JDK9), which are missing in prior releases, are:
Filter / assert / skip certain classes.
Get the instance of declaring the class itself.
Get either short stack trace or complete stack trace, instead of pulling the complete stack trace itself.
The complete code snippet has been put at the end of the article. Let's walk through each section:
Get All Stack Trace Information
Print all stack frame info.
stackFrame.getDeclaringClass()
// Will give instance of declaring class
List<StackFrame> stack =
StackWalker.getInstance(StackWalker.Option.RETAIN_CLASS_REFERENCE).walk((s) -> s.collect(Collectors.toList()));
System.out.println("All frames : \n" + stack.toString());
//output:
All frames :
[StackWalkerExample$StackWalker4.stackWalk4(StackWalkerExample.java:46),
StackWalkerExample$StackWalker3.stackWalk3(StackWalkerExample.java:39),
StackWalkerExample$StackWalker2.stackWalk2(StackWalkerExample.java:33),
StackWalkerExample$StackWalker1.stackWalk1(StackWalkerExample.java:27),
StackWalkerExample.stackWalk(StackWalkerExample.java:13),
StackWalkerExample.main(StackWalkerExample.java:22)]
Filter for Certain Classes
// Filter for interesting classes
final List<Class> interestingClasses = new ArrayList<>();
interestingClasses.add(StackWalker3.class);
Optional<StackFrame> framesWithInterestingClass = StackWalker.getInstance(StackWalker.Option.RETAIN_CLASS_REFERENCE).walk((s) ->
s.filter(f -> interestingClasses.contains(f.getDeclaringClass())).findFirst()
);
System.out.println("Frame with interseting class : \n"+framesWithInterestingClass.toString());
//output:
rame with interseting class :
Optional[StackWalkerExample$StackWalker3.stackWalk3(StackWalkerExample.java:39)]
Skip Classes in the Stack Frame
Trim the stack frame by skipping a few classes. Using this, we can consider short stack frames:
// Frames with skip
List<StackFrame> framesAfterSkip = StackWalker.getInstance(StackWalker.Option.RETAIN_CLASS_REFERENCE).walk((s) ->
s.skip(2).collect(Collectors.toList()));
System.out.println("Frames after skip : \n"+framesAfterSkip.toString());
//Output:
Frames after skip :
[StackWalkerExample$StackWalker2.stackWalk2(StackWalkerExample.java:33),
StackWalkerExample$StackWalker1.stackWalk1(StackWalkerExample.java:27),
StackWalkerExample.stackWalk(StackWalkerExample.java:13),
StackWalkerExample.main(StackWalkerExample.java:22)]
// It does not have StackWalker3& StackWalker4, the first two in the list
Complete Code
import java.util.ArrayList;
import java.util.List;
import java.util.Optional;
import java.util.stream.Collectors;
import java.lang.StackWalker.*;
/**
* Created by vkotari on 12/18/2016.
*/
public class StackWalkerExample {
private class StackWalker4{
public void stackWalk4(){
List<StackFrame> stack =
StackWalker.getInstance(StackWalker.Option.RETAIN_CLASS_REFERENCE).walk((s) -> s.collect(Collectors.toList()));
System.out.println("All frames : \n" + stack.toString());
for(StackFrame stackFrame : stack){
System.out.println(stackFrame.getDeclaringClass().toString());
}
// Filter for interesting classes
final List<Class> interestingClasses = new ArrayList<>();
interestingClasses.add(StackWalker3.class);
Optional<StackFrame> framesWithInterestingClass = StackWalker.getInstance(StackWalker.Option.RETAIN_CLASS_REFERENCE).walk((s) ->
s.filter(f -> interestingClasses.contains(f.getDeclaringClass())).findFirst()
);
System.out.println("Frame with interseting class : \n"+framesWithInterestingClass.toString());
// Frames with skip
List<StackFrame> framesAfterSkip = StackWalker.getInstance(StackWalker.Option.RETAIN_CLASS_REFERENCE).walk((s) ->
s.skip(2).collect(Collectors.toList())
);
System.out.println("Frames after skip : \n"+framesAfterSkip.toString());
}
}
public void stackWalk(){
new StackWalker1().stackWalk1();
}
public void print(){
System.out.println("Hello World.");
}
public static void main(String args[]){
System.out.println("StackWalkerExample...");
new StackWalkerExample().stackWalk();
}
private class StackWalker1{
public void stackWalk1(){
new StackWalker2().stackWalk2();
}
}
private class StackWalker2{
public void stackWalk2(){
new StackWalker3().stackWalk3();
}
}
private class StackWalker3{
public void stackWalk3(){
new StackWalker4().stackWalk4();
}
}
}
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