JVM step by step simulator
Is there a free JVM implementation that allow to see the content of the different parts of the Java Virtual Machine (e.g., callstack, heap) and execute a program step by step?
jvm bytecode
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Is there a free JVM implementation that allow to see the content of the different parts of the Java Virtual Machine (e.g., callstack, heap) and execute a program step by step?
jvm bytecode
add a comment |
Is there a free JVM implementation that allow to see the content of the different parts of the Java Virtual Machine (e.g., callstack, heap) and execute a program step by step?
jvm bytecode
Is there a free JVM implementation that allow to see the content of the different parts of the Java Virtual Machine (e.g., callstack, heap) and execute a program step by step?
jvm bytecode
jvm bytecode
asked Nov 19 at 20:40
Briomkez
16119
16119
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Once the JIT compiles the bytecode to native code, the VM registers and stack have little meaning.
I would use your debugger to see what the Java program is doing line by line. The bytecode is for a virtual machine, not an actual one and the JVM doesn't have to follow the VM literally, only what the program does.
The JIT can
- use the many registers your CPU has rather than use a pure stack.
- inline code rather than perform method calls.
- remove code which it determines isn't used.
- place objects on the stack.
- not synchronize objects which are only used in a local method.
A good tool to see how the code is translated from byte code to machine code is JITWatch
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1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
Once the JIT compiles the bytecode to native code, the VM registers and stack have little meaning.
I would use your debugger to see what the Java program is doing line by line. The bytecode is for a virtual machine, not an actual one and the JVM doesn't have to follow the VM literally, only what the program does.
The JIT can
- use the many registers your CPU has rather than use a pure stack.
- inline code rather than perform method calls.
- remove code which it determines isn't used.
- place objects on the stack.
- not synchronize objects which are only used in a local method.
A good tool to see how the code is translated from byte code to machine code is JITWatch
add a comment |
Once the JIT compiles the bytecode to native code, the VM registers and stack have little meaning.
I would use your debugger to see what the Java program is doing line by line. The bytecode is for a virtual machine, not an actual one and the JVM doesn't have to follow the VM literally, only what the program does.
The JIT can
- use the many registers your CPU has rather than use a pure stack.
- inline code rather than perform method calls.
- remove code which it determines isn't used.
- place objects on the stack.
- not synchronize objects which are only used in a local method.
A good tool to see how the code is translated from byte code to machine code is JITWatch
add a comment |
Once the JIT compiles the bytecode to native code, the VM registers and stack have little meaning.
I would use your debugger to see what the Java program is doing line by line. The bytecode is for a virtual machine, not an actual one and the JVM doesn't have to follow the VM literally, only what the program does.
The JIT can
- use the many registers your CPU has rather than use a pure stack.
- inline code rather than perform method calls.
- remove code which it determines isn't used.
- place objects on the stack.
- not synchronize objects which are only used in a local method.
A good tool to see how the code is translated from byte code to machine code is JITWatch
Once the JIT compiles the bytecode to native code, the VM registers and stack have little meaning.
I would use your debugger to see what the Java program is doing line by line. The bytecode is for a virtual machine, not an actual one and the JVM doesn't have to follow the VM literally, only what the program does.
The JIT can
- use the many registers your CPU has rather than use a pure stack.
- inline code rather than perform method calls.
- remove code which it determines isn't used.
- place objects on the stack.
- not synchronize objects which are only used in a local method.
A good tool to see how the code is translated from byte code to machine code is JITWatch
answered Nov 22 at 17:49
Peter Lawrey
440k55558958
440k55558958
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