I’m having problems with jetty crashing intermittently, I’m using Jetty 6.1.24.
I’m running a neo4j Spring MVC webapp, Jetty will stay running for approx 1 hour and then I have to restart Jetty. It is running on small amazon ec2 instance, debian with 1.7gb of RAM.
I start Jetty using java -Xmx900m -server -jar start.jar
I am connecting to the server using putty, when Jetty crashes the putty session disconnects, I cannot see what error caused it to crash.
I would like to be able to see if it is an error generated by Spring, I’m not sure how to log the output from the spring app with Jetty. Or if it is Jetty or a memory issue, what would be the best way to monitor Jetty? I cannot recreate this on my local machine running windows. What do you think would be the best way to approach this? Thanks
When you say crash do you mean the JVM segfaults and disappears? If that’s the case I’d check and make sure you aren’t exhausting the machine’s available memory. Java on linux will crash when the system memory gets so low the JVM cannot allocate up to its maximum memory. For example, you’ve set the max JVM memory to 500MB of which it’s using 250MB at the moment. However, the Linux OS only has 128MB available. This produces unstable results and the JVM will segfault.
On windows the JVM is more well behaved in this scenario and throws OutOfMemoryError when the system is running low on memory.
I believe Jetty has some native code to do high volume request processing. Make sure that’s not being used. You want to isolate the crashes to Java and NOT some strange native lib. If you take out the native stuff and find it works then you have your answer as to what’s causing it. If it continues to crash then it very well could be what I’m describing.
You can force the JVM to allocate all the memory at startup with -Xms900m that can make sure the JVM doesn’t fight with other processes for memory. Once it has the full Xmx amount allocated it won’t crash. Not a solution, but you can easily test it this way.