Package java.lang.instrument
The class files that comprise an agent are packaged into a JAR file, either with the application in an executable JAR, or more commonly, as a separate JAR file called an agent JAR. An attribute in the main manifest of the JAR file identifies one of the class files in the JAR file as the agent class. The agent class defines a special method that the JVM invokes to start the agent.
Agents that are packaged with an application in an executable JAR are started at JVM statup time. Agents that are packaged into an agent JAR file may be started at JVM startup time via a command line option, or where an implementation supports it, started in a running JVM.
Agents can transform classes in arbitrary ways at load time, transform modules, or transform the bytecode of methods of already loaded classes. Developers or administrators that deploy agents, deploy applications that package an agent with the application, or use tools that load agents into a running application, are responsible for verifying the trustworthiness of each agent including the content and structure of the agent JAR file.
Starting an agent
Starting an agent packaged with an application in an executable JAR file
The JAR File Specification defines
manifest attributes for standalone applications that are packaged as executable
JAR files. If an implementation supports a mechanism to start an application as
an executable JAR, then the main manifest of the JAR file can include the
Launcher-Agent-Class
attribute to specify the binary name of the Java agent
class that is packaged with the application. If the attribute is present then the
JVM starts the agent by loading the agent class and invoking its agentmain
method. The method is invoked before the application main
method is invoked.
The agentmain
method has one of two possible signatures. The JVM first
attempts to invoke the following method on the agent class:
public static void agentmain(String agentArgs, Instrumentation inst)
If the agent class does not define this method then the JVM will attempt to invoke:
public static void agentmain(String agentArgs)
The value of the agentArgs
parameter is always the empty string. In
the first method, the inst
parameter is an Instrumentation
object
that the agent can use to instrument code.
The agentmain
method should do any necessary initialization
required to start the agent and return. If the agent cannot be started, for
example the agent class cannot be loaded, the agent class does not define a
conformant agentmain
method, or the agentmain
method throws
an uncaught exception or error, the JVM will abort before the application
main
method is invoked.
Starting an agent from the command-line interface
Where an implementation provides a means to start agents from the command-line interface, an agent JAR is specified via the following command line option:
-javaagent:<jarpath>[=<options>]
where <jarpath>
is the path to the agent JAR file and
<options>
is the agent options.
The main manifest of the agent JAR file must contain the attribute
Premain-Class
. The value of this attribute is the binary name of the agent class
in the JAR file. The JVM starts the agent by loading the agent class and invoking its
premain
method. The method is invoked before the application main
method is invoked. The premain
method has one of two possible signatures.
The JVM first attempts to invoke the following method on the agent class:
public static void premain(String agentArgs, Instrumentation inst)
If the agent class does not define this method then the JVM will attempt to invoke:
public static void premain(String agentArgs)
The agent is passed its agent options via the agentArgs
parameter.
The agent options are passed as a single string, any additional parsing
should be performed by the agent itself. In the first method, the inst
parameter is an Instrumentation
object that the agent can use to instrument
code.
If the agent cannot be started, for example the agent class cannot be loaded,
the agent class does not define a conformant premain
method, or the
premain
method throws an uncaught exception or error, the JVM will abort before
the application main
method is invoked.
An implementation is not required to provide a way to start agents
from the command-line interface. When it does, then it supports the
-javaagent
option as specified above. The -javaagent
option
may be used multiple times on the same command-line, thus starting multiple
agents. The premain
methods will be called in the order that the
agents are specified on the command line. More than one agent may use the
same <jarpath>
.
The agent class may also have an agentmain
method for use when the agent
is started after in a running JVM (see below). When the agent is started using a
command-line option, the agentmain
method is not invoked.
Starting an agent in a running JVM
An implementation may provide a mechanism to start agents in a running JVM (meaning
after JVM startup). The details as to how this is initiated are implementation specific
but typically the application has already started, and its main
method has
already been invoked. Where an implementation supports starting an agent in a running
JVM, the following applies:
The agent class must be packaged into an agent JAR file. The main manifest of the agent JAR file must contain the attribute
Agent-Class
. The value of this attribute is the binary name of the agent class in the JAR file.The agent class must define a public static
agentmain
method.The JVM prints a warning on the standard error stream for each agent that it attempts to start in a running JVM. If an agent was previously started (at JVM startup, or started in a running JVM), then it is implementation specific as to whether a warning is printed when attempting to start the same agent a second or subsequent time. Warnings can be disabled by means of an implementation-specific command line option.
Implementation Note: For the HotSpot VM, the JVM option
-XX:+EnableDynamicAgentLoading
is used to opt-in to allow dynamic loading of agents into a running JVM. This option suppresses the warning to standard error when starting an agent in a running JVM.
The JVM starts the agent by loading the agent class and invoking its
agentmain
method. The agentmain
method has one of two possible signatures.
The JVM first attempts to invoke the following method on the agent class:
public static void agentmain(String agentArgs, Instrumentation inst)
If the agent class does not define this method then the JVM will attempt to invoke:
public static void agentmain(String agentArgs)
The agent is passed its agent options via the agentArgs
parameter.
The agent options are passed as a single string, any additional parsing
should be performed by the agent itself. In the first method, the inst
parameter is an Instrumentation
object that the agent can use to instrument
code.
The agentmain
method should do any necessary initialization
required to start the agent. When startup is complete the method should
return. If the agent cannot be started (for example, because the agent class
cannot be loaded, or because the agent class does not have a conformant
agentmain
method), the JVM will not abort. If the agentmain
method throws an uncaught exception it will be ignored (but may be logged
by the JVM for troubleshooting purposes).
The agent class may also have a premain
method for use when the agent
is started using a command-line option. The premain
method is not invoked
when the agent is started in a running JVM.
Loading agent classes and the modules/classes available to the agent class
Classes loaded from the agent JAR file are loaded by the
system class loader and are
members of the system class loader's unnamed module. The system class loader typically defines the class containing
the application main
method too.
The classes visible to the agent class are the classes visible to the system class loader and minimally include:
The classes in packages exported by the modules in the boot layer. Whether the boot layer contains all platform modules or not will depend on the initial module or how the application was started.
The classes that can be defined by the system class loader (typically the class path) to be members of its unnamed module.
Any classes that the agent arranges to be defined by the bootstrap class loader to be members of its unnamed module.
If agent classes need to link to classes in platform (or other) modules
that are not in the boot layer then the application may need to be started in
a way that ensures that these modules are in the boot layer. In the JDK
implementation for example, the --add-modules
command line option can
be used to add modules to the set of root modules to resolve at startup.
Supporting classes that the agent arranges to be loaded by the bootstrap
class loader (by means of appendToBootstrapClassLoaderSearch
or the Boot-Class-Path
attribute
specified below), must link only to classes defined to the bootstrap class loader.
There is no guarantee that all platform classes can be defined by the boot
class loader.
If a custom system class loader is configured (by means of the system property
java.system.class.loader
as specified in the getSystemClassLoader
method) then it must
define the appendToClassPathForInstrumentation
method as specified in
appendToSystemClassLoaderSearch
.
In other words, a custom system class loader must support the mechanism to
add an agent JAR file to the system class loader search.
JAR File Manifest Attributes
The following attributes in the main section of the application or agent JAR file manifest are defined for Java agents:
Launcher-Agent-Class
- If an implementation supports a mechanism to start an application in an executable JAR file, then this attribute, if present, specifies the binary name of the agent class that is packaged with the application. The agent is started by invoking the agent class
agentmain
method. It is invoked before the applicationmain
method is invoked.Premain-Class
- If an agent JAR is specified at JVM launch time, this attribute specifies the binary name of the agent class in the JAR file. The agent is started by invoking the agent class
premain
method. It is invoked before the applicationmain
method is invoked. If the attribute is not present the JVM will abort.Agent-Class
- If an implementation supports a mechanism to start an agent sometime after the JVM has started, then this attribute specifies the binary name of the Java agent class in the agent JAR file. The agent is started by invoking the agent class
agentmain
method. This attribute is required; if not present the agent will not be started.Boot-Class-Path
- A list of paths to be searched by the bootstrap class loader. Paths represent directories or libraries (commonly referred to as JAR or zip libraries on many platforms). These paths are searched by the bootstrap class loader after the platform specific mechanisms of locating a class have failed. Paths are searched in the order listed. Paths in the list are separated by one or more spaces. A path takes the syntax of the path component of a hierarchical URI. The path is absolute if it begins with a slash character ('/'), otherwise it is relative. A relative path is resolved against the absolute path of the agent JAR file. Malformed and non-existent paths are ignored. When an agent is started sometime after the JVM has started then paths that do not represent a JAR file are ignored. This attribute is optional.
Can-Redefine-Classes
- Boolean (
true
orfalse
, case irrelevant). Is the ability to redefine classes needed by this agent. Values other thantrue
are consideredfalse
. This attribute is optional, the default isfalse
.Can-Retransform-Classes
- Boolean (
true
orfalse
, case irrelevant). Is the ability to retransform classes needed by this agent. Values other thantrue
are consideredfalse
. This attribute is optional, the default isfalse
.Can-Set-Native-Method-Prefix
- Boolean (
true
orfalse
, case irrelevant). Is the ability to set native method prefix needed by this agent. Values other thantrue
are consideredfalse
. This attribute is optional, the default isfalse
.
An agent JAR file may have both the Premain-Class
and
Agent-Class
attributes present in the manifest. When the agent is started
on the command-line using the -javaagent
option then the
Premain-Class
attribute specifies the binary name of the agent class and the
Agent-Class
attribute is ignored. Similarly, if the agent is started sometime
after the JVM has started, then the Agent-Class
attribute specifies
the binary name of the agent class (the value of Premain-Class
attribute is
ignored).
Instrumenting code in modules
As an aid to agents that deploy supporting classes on the search path of the bootstrap class loader, or the search path of the class loader that loads the main agent class, the Java virtual machine arranges for the module of transformed classes to read the unnamed module of both class loaders.
- Since:
- 1.5
-
ClassDescriptionThis class serves as a parameter block to the
Instrumentation.redefineClasses
method.A transformer of class files.Thrown by an implementation ofClassFileTransformer.transform
when its input parameters are invalid.This class provides services needed to instrument Java programming language code.Thrown by an implementation ofInstrumentation.redefineClasses
when one of the specified classes cannot be modified.Thrown to indicate that a module cannot be modified.