Eclipse uses 100 % CPU randomly - eclipse

My eclipse sometimes starts using 100 % of my CPU very spontaneously.
I can't figure out why it needs that much CPU usage. There is no background task like "building workspace" running.
After some time the CPU load drops to 0 and everything is normal.
I can't find any information related to the problem in workspace/.metadata/.log file.
Has anybody some tip how I can figure out which part of eclipse is using the CPU so heavily? Is there a way to get a thread dump of eclipse? The kill -3 on the eclipse process doesn't do anything.
Eclipse Version: Galileo JavaEE
Operating System: Linux 2.6.31

Sounds like garbage collection
You could try changing the settings in your eclipse.ini, maybe with a higher Xmx value
--launcher.XXMaxPermSize
256m
-vmargs
-Xms256m
-Xmx1024m
-XX:PermSize=64m
-Xss1M
-server
-XX:+DoEscapeAnalysis
-XX:+UseConcMarkSweepGC

You can use visualvm to profile eclipse, get a heap dump or a thread dump, see which threads are running, etc.

If anyone else is having this problem, I fixed it for myself.
Set the option "auto build project" to off. That should remove a lot of the CPU used by Eclipse.

For my installation, I noticed the heap status indicator (Enabled VIA Window>Preferences "Show heap status" under General) was displaying less max heap than allocated in eclipse.ini (the -Xmx setting). The status indicator was bouncing around indicating that garbage collection was struggling to keep memory low.
Increasing the initial/min heap size (the -Xms setting) seems to have caused Eclipse/Java to stop trying to manage memory as much.

Eclipse is loading and unloading information from memory whenever this is required. If you workspace is big and you work with multiple projects and also your eclipse is configured to use low ammount of memory this is normal. Someone suggested above to change the xmx and xms values so that your eclipse uses more memory (if you have available) I suggest u put the same value to both of them. For example -Xms4048m and -Xmx4048m (or more) in your eclipse.ini file. This way your system will attempt to make use of that space once you start your IDE and the Garbage Collector (GC) takes less time to process data.

For me, the solution was to give Eclipse fewer threads. From my really long answer here:
Solution: decrease the max number of threads Eclipse can use, down to 1/2 as many as your computer has. So, if your computer has 8 physical "cores" (actually: hyperthreads), then decrease the max number of threads that Eclipse can use to 4, or <= half of your number of cores for your system, as follows:
In $HOME/eclipse/cpp-2022-09/eclipse/eclipse.ini on Linux Ubuntu, or equivalent for your OS, make this change (reducing from 10 threads max, to 4, in my case):
Change from:
-Declipse.p2.max.threads=10
to:
-Declipse.p2.max.threads=4
Restart Eclipse.
Now, Eclipse can only take up to 4 of my 8 threads, and my system runs much better!
Read my long answer for more details and other changes I made to help: High CPU usage in Eclipse when idle

Related

Eclipse not responding, javaw.exe causing high CPU usage

Last night, I was working in Eclipse Juno when it stopped responding. It's been doing this ever since; if I try to modify code or run it, it will stop responding for a few seconds.
In Task Manager, it shows several instances of javaw.exe running and that my CPU is at 100%. However, seeing as my computer is still running, I doubt that is actually the case. Nonetheless, these files worry me and I don't know if they should be deleted or not.
I tried increasing the memory of the classes I'm working on (Eclipse "javaw.exe" High CPU usage -> How to increase application heap size in Eclipse?) but it didn't help.
I'm don't know to much about the inner workings of Eclipse so please bear with me.

How to make GGTS / STS super fast?

I am using GGTS 3.2 JUNO 4.2.2 with Grails 2.2.1. It occurs to me that the environment is very slow after a while. What can I do to make it faster?
Is there a way to use the full potential of the underlying system?
What I did was (GGTS.ini):
-Xms768m
-Xmx768m
-XX:PermSize=1024m
-XX:MaxPermSize=1024m
-XX:+UseParallelGC
Working with Grails and GGTS demands a high amount of memory provided to GGTS. The reason why your IDE is getting slower by the time is because it has to do many "stop-the-world" Garbage Collections to get the memory it needs.
Especially you can see that on opening a GSP file the first time on your IDE ...then GGTS goes dark for a while.
And you can see that on the heap status at the right bottom of your IDE (enable it at your preferences). Every time the used memory is near to your provided 1GB your GGTS is stop working for two or more seconds. After that there is some free memory again.
1GB of memory for GGTS is ridiculous low - 2GB should be the minimum with Grails and Eclipse.
But that's not all. GGTS has a memory leak with Grails Tests and automatically building. You can try to remove the Unit and Integration tests from your projects build path. That is my trick to avoid slowdowns. But if I had to write Unit Tests I have to restart GGTS every once in a while. (And I have 8192m written in my ggts.ini.)
Eclipse Foundation has published solutions for this
http://wiki.eclipse.org/Platform_UI/Juno_Performance_Investigation
Putting this: -vm C:\devsw\java\jdk7_67\jre\bin\server\jvm.dll in my GGTS.ini (and restarting GGTS) has stopped the blue circle from spinning.

Out of Memory error starting JBoss with Portal from Eclipse

I cannot get JBoss Portal to start from Eclipse, though the AS alone starts fine, and the Portal starts correctly as well, when started from the command line as opposed to from within Eclipse. I'm running in Windows, with 3GB. Suggestions? Thank you.
I've spend hours to discover this, and almost gave up and started to use JBoss out of Eclipse.
In order to increase your JBoss vmargs when starting it from Eclipse you have to change JBoss launch configuration. If you change standalone.conf, nothing happens because Eclipse doesn't use it.
So, to change JBoss vmargs in Eclipse, you have to go to "Servers" tab, right click on your Jboss instance, and select "Open".
It will appear a new window. In the first section, you have a option: "Open launch configuration". When you click there, you'll see the textbox to change vmargs.
Hope this helps you!
There are different types of OutOfMemory errors:
java.lang.OutOfMemoryError: Java heap space
Increase the -Xms and -Xmx. I'd make sure they are set at least 256m and generally it's a good idea to set them to the same value.
java.lang.OutOfMemoryError: PermGen space
Add either -XX:+CMSPermGenSweepingEnabled or increase the PermGen size: -XX:PermSize=256m
java.lang.OutOfMemoryError: GC overhead limit exceeded
Add more heap, the garbage collector can't free enough memory with each cycle. Also try turning on GC logging.
java.lang.OutOfMemoryError: unable to create new native thread
Decrease your heap :) This means that you have too much memory allocated to the heap that the OS doesn't have enough memory to create threads..
Two last things, the above can be configured in jboss/bin/run.conf.
Also when starting JBoss see what -X parameters are being passed to the JVM, it prints this information by default, verify that it's what you expect it to be.
You need to increase the memory you're allocating to Java, in particular heap space and PermGen. This article is highly relevant. It mentions that this issue often occurs with Eclipse and JBoss (since both are fairly large), and provides a solution (adjusting the command-line flags).
What are you using for running portal from eclipse? Maybe Jboss tools can help you
http://www.jboss.org/tools
According to my experiments, all options of vmargs set in eclipse.ini, plays only once - when creating a new workspace. When you want to change the options in the existing workspace, use run/debug configuration as in https://stackoverflow.com/a/10814631/715269. vmargs in ini won't be read any more.
Be careful, you should set -XX:MaxPermSize=...M, not -XX:PermSize=..., the last sets minimal, starting PermSize.
ad. Jeremy. It is senseless to put mins and maxs to the same value. You deprive Eclipse of adaptability. -Xms and -Xmx ( heap) and PermGen and MaxPermGen should be different. (MaxPermGen =256 by default)

How can you speed up Eclipse?

This question's answers are a community effort. Edit existing answers to improve this post. It is not currently accepting new answers or interactions.
How can you make the experience with Eclipse faster?
For instance: I disable all the plugins I don't need (Mylyn, Subclipse, …).
Instead of using a plugin for Mercurial, I configure TortoiseHG as an external tool.
The three most influential factors for Eclipse speed are:
Using the latest version of Eclipse (2020-06 as on 26 June 2020)
Note that David Balažic's comment (July 2014) contradicts that criteria which was working six years ago:
The "same" workspace in Indigo (3.7.2) SR2 loads in 4 seconds, in Kepler SR2 (4.3.2) in 7 seconds and in Luna (4.4.0) in 10 seconds. All are Java EE bundles. Newer versions have more bundled plugins, but still the trend is obvious. (by "same" workspace I mean: same (additionally installed) plugins used, same projects checked out from version control).
Launching it with the latest JDK (Java 14 at the time of writing, which does not prevent you to compile in your Eclipse project with any other JDK you want: 1.4.2, 1.5, 1.6 older...)
-vm jdk1.6.0_10\jre\bin\client\jvm.dll
Configuring the eclipse.ini (see this question for a complete eclipse.ini)
-Xms512m
-Xmx4096m
[...]
The Xmx argument is the amount of memory Eclipse will get (in simple terms). With -Xmx4g, it gets 4 GB of RAM, etc.
Note:
Referring to the jvm.dll has advantages:
Splash screen coming up sooner.
Eclipse.exe in the process list instead of java.exe.
Firewalls: Eclipse wants access to the Internet instead of Java.
Window management branding issues, especially on Windows and Mac.
Dec. 2020, Udo conforms in the comments
From version 4.8 (Photon) an up there was a steady speed gain after each version.
The main platform was optimized every release to load faster, enable more features for the dark theme and to add more features for newer Java versions for the Java development tools.
Especially with-in the last 3 versions the startup time was increased a lot. There should be a significant increase in start-up time with the newest version of Eclipse 2020-12.
In my experience it started a lot faster with each new version.
But: There are still plug-ins which do not follow the new way of using the Eclipse API and are therefore still slow to start.
Since the change to Java 11 as the minimum runtime version starting from Eclipse version 2020-09 at least the core system uses the newer features of the JVM. It is up to the providers of the other plug-ins to upgrade to newer APIs and to use the full power of modern CPUs (e.g. concurrent programming model).
See also
Giving Eclipse the right number of threads and the right amount of memory: Problem: Eclipse and the Eclipse indexer take up all my resources / CPU%
Add -Xverify:none to your eclipse.ini file.
It will cut down your Eclipse startup time considerably (50% in my case if not more). This will tell the VM not to validate all the .class files it is loading.
Consider this: Never Disable Bytecode Verification in a Production System
(as mentioned in the comments)
Go to Windows -> Preferences -> Validation and uncheck any validators you don't want or need.
For Eclipse 3.7, you use Windows -> Preferences -> General -> Startup and Shutdown.
Make sure that you're using the Sun JVM to run Eclipse.
On Linux, particularly Ubuntu, Eclipse is installed by default to use the open source GCJ, which has drastically poorer performance. Use update-alternatives --config java to switch to the Sun JVM to greatly improve UI snappiness in Eclipse.
Close any open projects which are not in current use.
Try to switch off the auto publish mode during development.
Thanks for the hints.
These options (mentioned above) helped me a lot:
Windows:
Increasing memory & regarding to my updated Java version in eclipse.ini:
-Dosgi.requiredJavaVersion=1.6
-Xms512m
-Xmx512m
-XX:PermSize=512m
-XX:MaxPermSize=512M
-Xverify:none
Additionally, since we are optimizing for speed, setting -Xms to the same value as -Xmx makes the JVM start with the maximum amount of memory it is allowed to use.
Linux / Ubuntu:
Using
update-alternatives --config java
Another performance boost can be gained by disabling label decorations
(Windows -> Preferences; General -> Appearance -> Label Decorations)
and by disabling unused capabilities on startup
(Windows -> Preferences; General -> Startup and Shutdown).
You may also get additional performance by choosing a different garbage collection strategy depending on your JVM.
If you're fed up with restart cycles you could use JavaRebel from ZeroTurnaround. That will shorten your time spent on server/client restarts.
While not directly related to Eclipse:
If you're running Windows 7 (and presumably Windows Vista), be sure to disable the file indexing of your workspace folder if your stuff is is in the default place - your home folder. Windows by default indexes everything in you home folder, and it's normally just a waste for your workspace. (Right click the workspace folder in explorer , Properties -> Advanced.)
Disable virus scanners, or at least configure any virus scanner to not scan JAR files on read access.
Eclipse loads plug-ins lazily, and most common plug-ins,
like Subclipse, don't do anything if you don't use them.
They don't slow Eclipse down at all during run time, and it
won't help you to disable them. In fact, Mylyn was shown to
reduce Eclipse's memory footprint when used correctly.
I run Eclipse with tons of plug-ins without any performance
penalty at all.
Try disabling compiler settings that you perhaps don't
need (e.g. the sub-options under "parameter is never read).
Which version of Eclipse are you using? Older versions
were known to be slow if you upgraded them over and over
again, because they got their plug-ins folder inflated
with duplicate plug-ins (with different versions). This
is not a problem in version 3.4.
Use working-sets. They work better than closing projects,
particularly if you need to switch between sets of
projects all the time.
It's not only the memory that you need to increase with the -Xmx
switch, it's also the perm gen size. I think that
problem was solved in Eclipse 3.4.
There is another thing that really speeds up Eclipse on both Windows and especially Linux - putting the JVM in RAM disk.
For Windows you can use the commercial RAM disk driver from Qsoft.
For Linux use any of the methods described in numerous articles on the Internet. It is important to give additional space to the RAM disk that is 10% bigger than the size of the JVM.
Check it out. It really makes a difference.
I give it a ton of memory (add a -Xmx switch to the command that starts it) and try to avoid quitting and restarting it- I find the worst delays are on startup, so giving it lots of RAM lets me keep going longer before it crashes out.
Along with the latest software (latest Eclipse and Java) and more RAM, you may need to
Remove the unwanted plugins (not all need Mylyn and J2EE version of Eclipse)
unwanted validators
disable spell check
close unused tabs in Java editor (yes it helps reducing Eclipse burden)
close unused projects
disable unwanted label declaration (SVN/CVS)
disable auto building
reference:making-eclipse-ide-faster
I implemented a plug-in to configure which features to be loaded in runtime to improve the performance and reduce the conflict among different plug-ins.
You may have installed many features into your Eclipse, such as Android development tools, C/C++ development tools, PHP, SVN, Git and ClearCase plug-ins. Hence Eclipse is heavy and costs a lot of memory, and some of them are not often used.
So you could use my tool to create different runtime policies, such as one that has Android, Git and base Eclipse, another one contains C/C++, SVN and base Eclipse. Next time Eclipse would only load the specified features if you're using the policy that only has Android and Git.
You are welcome to try it and give me the feedback. :)
The name of that tool is Equinox Advanced Configurator.
One more trick is to disable automatic builds.
I also tuned vmargs and stuff. But what really sped up Eclipse on Windows is the "proper" configuration of the anti-virus software. You have to disable the on-demand scanning of packed files. jar files, and many files related to java are packed with PKZIP algorithm to spare space. Because Eclipse uses tons of java files, an anti-virus attempts to individually unpack and scan every one of them. So for Windows platform: turn off the on-demand scanning of packed files, otherwise Eclipse will be unusably slow. Please keep in mind, that disabling this unfortunately makes your system weaker against attacks, most of the malware use packers.
I experienced a considerable improvement in performance when limiting the number of open tabs (in the past I frequently had 30+ tabs open). You can let Eclipse handle this for you automatically:
Window -> Preferences -> Editors -> close editors automatically
8 open tabs is the amount before the >> sign appears, so I tend to leave it at 8.
When opening more tabs, the ones the least recently accessed will be closed.
->When all editors are dirty or pinned
If it has unsaved modifications you can prompt to save & reuse (tab will be closed, a new one will be opened in its place). Or you can open a new editor end thus increase the amount of open tabs (the unobtrusive choice).
If you want to ensure some tabs never get closed autmatically, you can pin them. This by clicking on the pin icon (the rightmost icon in the toolbar, with "pin editor" as tooltiptext).
Best practices in this thread are implemented in the free Optimizer For Eclipse, from ZeroTurnaround.
What does it help with?
Insufficient memory allocation
Class verification overhead
Excessive indexes and history
Obsolete or slow JDK
Eclipse being out of date
Lengthy build and redeploy times
For more details, check out this article from RebelLabs.
Make an effort to configure your build path. Code completion uses a lot of memory if it has to go through your whole project folder.
Right click on your project and choose preferences.
Choose your build path setting and remove your project folder.
Then add only the folders where you have your source code and library code.
Not to be underrated is having a fast machine. 16-32 GB of RAM, SSD and a decent processor... and who0o0om there you go.
**Tips for making Eclipse IDE Faster**
Eclipse will run faster when working with small projects. But when you have to work with large project, you will get irritated with its speed. Even with a huge RAM you will not be happy with its
speed.Below steps will help eclipse to increase its speed
Remove unwanted activation of some of the plugins at start-up by going to windows–>preference–>General–>Startup and shutdown
also make sure you don’t use those plugins in any of your views
Disabling label decorations which is of less use for you, will also help you to gain some performance . Go to Windows–>Preference–>General–>Appearance–>Label -> Decorations
Close unwanted projects and use working set option to move from one group of project to another smoothly.
Configure eclipse.ini which will be available in the eclipse installed location.
Configuring eclipse.ini should be based on your RAM
-Xms256m
-Xmx512m
-XX:PermSize=512m
-XX:MaxPermSize=512M
Also have a look at http://wiki.eclipse.org/Eclipse.ini for more options
to configure eclipse.ini.
Do not keep lot of tabs opened in the editor. Better to have around 20 tabs . Regularly close the unused tabs. To open resource we can always use ctrl+shift+R and ctrl+shift+T (java resource) instead of opening lot of tabs
I experienced a considerable improvement in performance when limiting the number of open tabs (In the past I frequently had 30+ tabs open). You can let eclipse handle this for you automatically:
Window->Preferences->Editors-> close editors automatically
8 open tabs is the amount before the >> sign appears, so I set 14 as my default value.
When opening more tabs, the ones the least recently accessed will be closed. When all editors are dirty or pinned.
If it has unsaved modifications you can prompt to save & reuse (tab will be closed, a new one will be opened in its place). Or you can open a new editor end thus increase the amount of open tabs (the unobtrusive choice). If you want to ensure some tabs never get closed autmatically, you can pin them. This by clicking on the pin icon (the rightmost icon in the toolbar, with “pin editor” as tooltiptext).
Go to Windows -> Preferences -> Validation and uncheck any
validators
you don’t want or need.
Go to Windows -> Preferences -> General -> Appearance -> and uncheck any animation you don’t want or need.
Go to Windows -> Preferences -> Maven and check 'do not automatically update dependencies'.
I've disabled all unused options in Windows > Preferences > General and it has a huge positive impact on performance, eclipse is still slow when switching tabs, I don't want to increase memory, but it's a lot faster when scrolling. Thx for the tips.
Try this too, it will improve the performance:
cleaning up indexes - {workspace
path}.metadata.plugins\org.eclipse.jdt.core cleaning up history -
{workspace
path}.metadata.plugins\org.eclipse.core.resources.history
Cleaning the above folders will not impact the project files.
Well, if you are developing a GWT application using Eclipse, then this is the way:
Out of memory error in Eclipse
Also remember to add the same VM arguments to the hosted mode configuration.
If you use Maven and ivy do check out their consoles in case they are hogging processing during builds. I use ivy and on top of that I have certain JAR files (internal) changing with same version, so it has to workout all the time to fetch them.
If you have defined you project on a network drive then you will also experience lag during build/read/write type of processes.
Disable/uninstall plugins you don't need.
Close perpective that you don't need
Close unused database connections
In special cases, bad performance can be due to corrupt h2 or nwire databases. Read Five tips for speeding up Eclipse PDT and nWire for more information.
Where I work, we are dependent on a VM to run Debian. I have installed another Eclipse version on the VM for testing purpouses, but this sometimes creates conflicts if I have the other Eclipse version running. There is a shared folder which both of the Eclipse versions shares. I accidentally left the Debian Eclipse installation running in the background once and that gave me corrupt database files.
On Windows 8.
Open Control panel. Find Windows Defender. Go to settings
Exclude all folders where is your Spring/Eclipse and workspace
Apart from configuring eclipse.ini for memory usage. I have configured by "Start up & shutdown options". My Eclipse is blazing fast now.
The only real way to hasten Eclipse with the standard plug-ins is to give it more memory and in some cases access to a faster storage space / defragmented hard drive.
Beyond that there is not much you can do performance-wise: most standard plug-ins do not have a continuous runtime cost, even Mylyn is relatively fast.
Upgrading to the latest JVM supported on your machine may help as well.
Some people downgrade to older Eclipse versions to get better performance. It may also make sense to use Eclipse classic instead of the official releases.
Try these. There are two ways.
First Procedure
Refer this article.
http://www.javacodegeeks.com/2014/06/the-real-way-to-make-eclipse-run-faster-on-ubuntu.html
Second Procedure.
Execute the command in the terminal.
ramdisk
to get better performance and fast response for Ubuntu.
Ramdisk is part of system memory. Ubuntu by default uses a half of physical memory (RAM) as ramdisk, and it is mounted onto
/dev/shm
, it can be used just like normal disk space (create files and folders and manipulate them with better performance rather if they were stored on the hard disk). If ramdisk uses more than a half of RAM, data will be moved into the swap space. If ramdisk uses less, the remaining can still do what RAM’s doing.
Set upper limit of ramdisk
As is said above, ramdisk by default can use a half of RAM. If you want to change the upper limit, follow the steps below:
Edit /etc/fstab by your favourate editor:
gksudo gedit /etc/fstab
Find this line and change to make it looks like this(add this line if not exist, and change 512M to what you like.):
tmpfs /dev/shm tmpfs defaults,size=512M 0 0
Reboot or re-mount
/dev/shm
Mount /tmp onto ramdisk
To make it easy to use, you can mount a directory into
/dev/shm
by following commands:
mkdir /dev/shm/tmp
chmod 1777 /dev/shm/tmp
mount --bind /dev/shm/tmp /tmp

Is Eclipse 3.4 (Ganymede) memory usage significantly higher than 3.2?

I was happily using Eclipse 3.2 (or as happy as one can be using Eclipse) when for a forgotten reason I decided to upgrade to 3.4. I'm primarily using PyDev, Aptana, and Subclipse, very little Java development.
I've noticed 3.4 tends to really give my laptop a hernia compared to 3.2 (vista, core2duo, 2G). Is memory usage on 3.4 actually higher than on 3.2, and if so is there a way to reduce it?
EDIT: I tried disabling plugins (I didn't have much enabled anyway) and used the jvm monitor; the latter was interesting but I couldn't figure out how to use the info in any practical way. I'm still not able to reduce its memory footprint. I've also noticed every once in a while Eclipse just hangs for ~30 seconds, then magically comes back.
Yes memory usage can get real high and you might run into problems with your JVM, as the default setting is a bit to low.
Consider using this startup parameters when running eclipse:
-vmargs -XX:MaxPermSize=1024M -Xms256M -Xmx1024M
With those options, I manage to limit the memory used to 700Mo (which is quite high, but still workable with my 2 Go)
-vmargs
-Xms128m
-Xmx384m
-Xssv2m
-XX:PermSize=128m
-XX:MaxPermSize=128m
-XX:CompileThreshold=5
-XX:+UseParallelGC
-Dcom.sun.management.jmxremote
And consider also to launch
C:\[jdk1.6.0_0x path]\bin\jconsole.exe
And choose 'Connection / New connection / 'eclipse' to monitor the memory used by eclipse
(which is why I use '-Dcom.sun.management.jmxremote')
Other options are available here.
The more plugins you have, the more memory Eclipse will consume. 3.4 includes more plugins by default than 3.3, and so on, and so on, as more and more developers clamor for features to be included.
Go to Window->Show View, and start typing "plug in", and one of the options will be the Plug In Registry. Open that view, and click on the arrow to show active plugins only. These are the plugins actually loaded into memory. My Eclipse 3.3 currently has 89 out of 445 or so plugins loaded. You can then selectively start disabling plugins from the Help menu, once you see which ones you won't use (right now, for instance, I"m not using Mylyn, but I hope to in the future).
To add to my previous answer and to your recent update:
Eclipse just hangs for ~30 seconds, then magically comes back.
That is usually a sign for a failed network access with a timeout (and the associated 'freeze' while the application is waiting for said timeout).
try typing 'net use' in a DOS prompt, and check if you have net path declared there, some of them you could get rid off ('net use /D aUselessPath'). To be sure, check also the shares that you declare (net share).
Since you are with Vista, try also to deactivate superfetch and see if you still experience those freezes (both for eclipse and Firefox).
Open a CMD prompt with administrative privileges and enter "net stop superfetch" to stop the SuperFetch service.
It is not a good long-term solution though, just a quick check to make. Superfetch should be kept on, and will actually restart on your next reboot, since the service is set to start automatically at each Windows session.
Again, this is just to see if there is any connection between that service and your freezes.