how to expand size of Java stack trace to see bottom of stack? (triggering a stack overflow)

Urban Vagabond picture Urban Vagabond · Aug 8, 2012 · Viewed 10.2k times · Source

In Java, is there any way to view the complete, untruncated stack trace (e.g. by increasing the number of frames recorded), or otherwise get at the bottom of a stack trace? Normally the stack trace is truncated from the top at 1024 frames worth, but for a stack overflow problem this is fairly worthless as you really need to see who made the call that triggered the recursion, down near the bottom. Much better would truncation in the middle of the stack, but evidently Sun's JVM isn't smart enough to do this.

Perhaps even some special Sun-specific flags? I tried reducing the stack size to the minimum allowable (-Xss1000) but that's still more than 1024 frames worth.

In my case, I'm trying to debug a stack overflow that occurs in a Hadoop mapper, but only when running on really large input. I assume the problem comes because a recursive operation (Scala's foldRight) is being done on a really, really large linked list, and I need to rewrite it non-recursively ... but I need to know who made the call to foldRight. This is a basic routine called directly and indirectly in a lot of places and there's lots and lots of code out there that I'm working with, so this is highly non-obvious.

Answer

Odd picture Odd · Aug 8, 2012

Try the -XX:MaxJavaStackTraceDepth JVM option.

Here is a description from Stas's Blog

Max. no. of lines in the stack trace for Java exceptions (0 means all). With Java > 1.6, value 0 really means 0. value -1 or any negative number must be specified to print all the stack (tested with 1.6.0_22, 1.7.0 on Windows). With Java <= 1.5, value 0 means everything, JVM chokes on negative number (tested with 1.5.0_22 on Windows).