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Hotswap Agent

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Java unlimited runtime class and resource redefinition.

The main purpose of this project is to avoid infamous change->restart + wait->check development lifecycle. Save&Reload during development should be standard and many other languages (including C#) contain this feature.

This project is still in a beta version.

Easy to start

Download and install latest DCEVM Java patch + agent jar and launch your application server with options -XXaltjvm=dcevm -javaagent:hotswap-agent.jar to get basic setup. You can attach agent jar to the running JVM using the following example code snippet. Optionally add hotswap-agent.properties to your application to configure plugins and agent behaviour.

Plugins

Each application framework (Spring, Hibernate, Logback, ...) needs special reloading mechanism to keep up-to-date after class redefinition (e.g. Hibernate configuration reload after new entity class is introduced). Hotswap agent works as a plugin system and ships preconfigured with all major framework plugins. It is easy to write your custom plugin even as part of your application.

Contribute

This project is very complex due to lot of supported frameworks and various versions. Community contribution is mandatory to keep it alive. You can start by creating a plugin inside your application or by writing an example/integration test. There is always need for documentation improvement :-). Thank you for any help!

Quick start:

Install

  1. download latest release of DCEVM Java patch and launch the installer (e.g. java -jar installer-light.jar). Currently you need to select correct installer for Java major version (7/8).
  2. select java installation directory on your disc and press "Install DCEVM as altjvm" button. Java 1.7+ versions are supported.
  3. download latest release of Hotswap agent jar, unpack hotswap-agent.jar and put it anywhere on your disc. For example: C:\java\hotswap-agent.jar

Run your application

  1. add following command line java attributes: -XXaltjvm=dcevm -javaagent:PATH_TO_AGENT\hotswap-agent.jar (you need to replace PATH_TO_AGENT with an actual) directory. For example java -XXaltjvm=dcevm -javaagent:c:\java\hotswap-agent.jar YourApp. See IntelliJ IDEA and Netbeans forum threads for IDE specific setup guides. If your application is already running, you still can attach agent jar using the example code snippet.

  2. (optional) create a file named "hotswap-agent.properties" inside your resources directory, see available properties and default values: https://github.com/HotswapProjects/HotswapAgent/blob/master/hotswap-agent-core/src/main/resources/hotswap-agent.properties

  3. start the application in debug mode, check that the agent and plugins are initialized correctly:

     HOTSWAP AGENT: 9:49:29.548 INFO (org.hotswap.agent.HotswapAgent) - Loading Hotswap agent - unlimited runtime class redefinition.
     HOTSWAP AGENT: 9:49:29.725 INFO (org.hotswap.agent.config.PluginRegistry) - Discovered plugins: [org.hotswap.agent.plugin.hotswapper.HotswapperPlugin, org.hotswap.agent.plugin.jvm.AnonymousClassPatchPlugin, org.hotswap.agent.plugin.hibernate.HibernatePlugin, org.hotswap.agent.plugin.spring.SpringPlugin, org.hotswap.agent.plugin.jetty.JettyPlugin, org.hotswap.agent.plugin.tomcat.TomcatPlugin, org.hotswap.agent.plugin.zk.ZkPlugin, org.hotswap.agent.plugin.logback.LogbackPlugin]
     ...
     HOTSWAP AGENT: 9:49:38.700 INFO (org.hotswap.agent.plugin.spring.SpringPlugin) - Spring plugin initialized - Spring core version '3.2.3.RELEASE'
    
  4. save a changed resource and/or use the HotSwap feature of your IDE to reload changes

What is available?

  • Enhanced Java Hotswap - change method body, add/rename a method, field, ... The only unsupported operation is hierarchy change (change the superclass or remove an interface).
    • You can use standard Java Hotswap from IDE in debug mode to reload changed class
    • or set autoHotswap property -XXaltjvm=dcevm -javaagent:PATH_TO_AGENT\hotswap-agent.jar=autoHotswap=true to reload changed classes after compilation. This setup allows even reload on production system without restart.
  • Automatic configuration - all local classes and resources known to the running Java application are automatically discovered and watched for reload (all files on local filesystem, not inside JAR file).
  • Extra classpath - Need change a runtime class inside dependent JAR? Use extraClasspath property to add any directory as a classpath to watch for class files.
  • Reload resource after a change - resources from webapp directory are usually reloaded by application server. But what about other resources like src/main/resources? Use watchResources property to add any directory to watch for a resource change.
  • Framework support - through plugin system, many frameworks are supported. New plugins can be easily added.
  • Fast - until the plugin is initialized, it does not consume any resources or slow down the application (see Runtime overhead for more information)

Should you have any problems or questions, ask at HotswapAgent forum.

This project is similar to JRebel. Main differences are:

  • HotswapAgent (DCEVM) supports Java8!
  • HotswapAgent does not need any additional configuration for basic project setup.
  • JRebel is currently more mature and contains more plugins.
  • JRebel is neither open source nor free.
  • JRebel modifies bytecode of all classes on reload. You need special IDE plugin to fix debugging.
  • HotswapAgent extraClasspath is similar to JRebel configuration
  • HotswapAgent adds watchResources configuration

Examples

See HotswapAgentExamples GitHub project. The purpose of an example application is:

  • complex automate integration tests (check various configurations before a release, see run-tests.sh script)
  • to check "real world" plugin usage during plugin development (i.e. inside container)
  • to provide working solution for typical application setups
  • sandbox to simulate issues for existing or new setups

Feel free to fork/branch and create an application for your setup (functional, but as simple as possible). General setups will be merged into the master.

IDE support

None needed :) Really, all changes are transparent and all you need to do is to download patch+agent and setup your application / application server. Because we use standard java hotswap behaviour, your IDE will work as expected. However, we work on IDE plugins to help with download & configuration.

Configuration

The basic configuration set to reload classes and resources from classpath known to the running application (classloader). If you need a different configuration, add hotswap-agent.properties file to the classpath root (e.g. src/main/resources/hotswap-agent.properties).

Detail documentation of available properties and default values can be found in the agent properties file

Hotswap agent command line options

Full syntax of command line options is:

-javaagent:[yourpath/]hotswap-agent.jar=[option1]=[value1],[option2]=[value2]

Hotswap agent accepts following options:

  • autoHotswap=true - watch all .class files for change and automatically Hotswap the class in the running application (instead of running Hotswap from your IDE debugging session)
  • disablePlugin=[pluginName] - disable a plugin. Note that this will completely forbid the plugin to load (opposite to disablePlugin option in hotswap-agent.properties, which will only disable the plugin for a classloader. You can repeat this option for every plugin to disable.

How does it work?

DCEVM

Hotswap agent does the work of reloading resources and framework configuration (Spring, Hibernate, ...), but it depends on standard Java hotswap mechanism to actually reload classes. Standard Java hotswap allows only method body change , which makes it practically unusable. DCEVM is a JRE patch witch allows almost any structural class change on hotswap (with an exception of a hierarchy change). Although hotswap agent works even with standard java, we recommend to use DCEVM (and all tutorials use DCEVM as target JVM).

Hotswap agent

Hotswap agent is a plugin container with plugin manager, plugin registry, and several agent services (e.g. to watch for class/resource change). It helps with common tasks and classloading issues. It scans classpath for class annotated with @Plugin annotation, injects agent services and registers reloading hooks. Runtime bytecode modification is provided by javaasist library.

Plugins

Plugins administered by Hotswap agent are usually targeted towards a specific framework. For example Spring plugin uses agent services to:

  • Modify root Spring classes to get Spring contexts and registered scan path
  • Watch for any resource change on a scan path
  • Watch for a hotswap of a class file within a scan path package
  • Reload bean definition after a change
  • ... and many other

Java frameworks plugins:

  • Deltaspike (1.x) - messages, ViewConfig, repository, proxy reloading.
  • ELResolver 2.2 (JuelEL, Appache Commons EL, Oracle EL 3.0)- clear ELResolver cache on class change. Support hotswap for #{...} expressions.
  • Hibernate (3x,4x,5x) - Reload Hibernate configuration after entity create/change.
  • Jersey1 - reload Jersey1 container after root resource or provider class definition or redefinition.
  • Jersey2 - reload Jersey2 container after root resource or provider class definition or redefinition.
  • JSF (mojarra 2.1, 2.2, MyFaces 2.2) - support for application resource bundle changes (properties files).
  • Logback - Logback configuration reload.
  • Log4j2 - Log4j2 configuration reload.
  • OsgiEquinox - Hotswap support for Eclipse plugin or Eclipse platform development.
  • RestEasy (2.x, 3.x) - Cleanups and registers class redefinitions.
  • Seam (2.2, 2.3) - flush JBoss reference cache. Support for properties file change (messages[])
  • Spring (3x, 4.x) - Reload Spring configuration after class definition/change.
  • WebObjects - Clear key value coding, component, action and validation caches after class change.
  • Weld (CDI) (2.2-2.4) - reload bean class definition after class definition/change. Support for weld proxy, EAR. Beans can be reloaded according strategy defined in property file.
  • WildFlyELResolver - Clear BeanELResolver after any class redefinition.
  • ZK (5x-7x) - ZK Framework (http://www.zkoss.org/). Change library properties default values to disable caches, maintains Label cache and bean resolver cache.

Servlet containers and application servers plugins:

  • JBossModules - add extra class path to JBoss's module class loader. (Wildfly)
  • Jetty - add extra classpath to the app classloader. All versions supporting WebAppContext.getExtraClasspath should be supported.
  • Tomcat (7.x, 8.x) configure Apache Tomcat with extraClasspath property.

JVM plugins - hotswapping enhancements:

  • AnonymousClassPatch - Swap anonymous inner class names to avoid not compatible changes.
  • ClassInit - initializes new static members/enum values after class/enum redefinition and keeps surviving static values. (Fix of known DCEVM limitation)
  • Hotswapper - Watch for any class file change and reload (hotswap) it on the fly via Java Platform Debugger Architecture (JPDA)
  • Proxy (supported com.sun.proxy, CGlib) - redefines proxy classes that implement or extend changed interfaces or classes.

Find a detail documentation of each plugin in the plugin project main README.md file.

Runtime overhead

It really depends on how many frameworks you use and which caches are disabled. Example measurements for a large, real world enterprise application based on Spring + Hibernate, run on Jetty.

Setup                        | Startup time
-----------------------------|-------------
Run (plain Java)             | 23s
Debug (plain Java)           | 24s
Debug (plain DCEVM)          | 28s
Agent - disabled all plugins | 31s
Agent - all plugins          | 35s

How to write a plugin

You can write plugin directly as a part of your application. Set pluginPackages=your.plugin.package inside your hotswap-agent.properties configuration to discover @Plugin annotated classes. You will also need agent JAR dependency to compile, but be careful NOT to add the JAR to your application, it must be loaded only as a javaagent. Maven dependency:

    <dependency>
        <groupId>org.hotswap.agent</groupId>
        <artifactId>HotswapAgent</artifactId>
        <version>${project.version}</version>
        <scope>provided</scope>
    </dependency>

(Note that the JAR is not yet in central maven repository - you need to build it from source first).

See ExamplePlugin (part of TestApplication) to go through a commented simple plugin. Read agent readme to understand agent concepts. Check existing plugins source code for more examples.

Creating Release

Launch run-tests.sh script in the main directory. Currently you have to setup JAVA_HOME location directory manually. At least Java 7 and Java 8 with DCEVM should be checked before a release. All automatic tests are set to fail the whole script in case of any single test failure.

Go to directory representing repository root. In case DCEVM is named dcevm

mvn release:prepare
mvn release:perform

In case your DCEVM is named differently i.e. server

mvn release:prepare -Darguments="-Ddcevm=server"
mvn release:perform -Darguments="-Ddcevm=server"

Credits

Hotswap agent:

  • Jiri Bubnik - project coordinator, initial implementation
  • Alexandros Papadakis - Maven Versioning, Weld, JSF, Hibernate3, RestEasy, WildFly plugins
  • Erki Ehtla - Spring plugin, Proxy plugin
  • Vladimir Dvorak - Seam, ELResolver, JSF, OsgiEquinox, Weld, Deltaspike, JavaBean, JBossModules, ClassInit
  • Sergey Lysenko - Weld plugin
  • Samuel Pelletier - WebObjects plugin
  • Jan Tecl - web design
  • Lukasz Warzecha - Log4j2 plugin

DCEVM:

  • Ivan Dubrov - current project coordinator, update to Java7+Java8, patches, build system (Gradle)
  • Thomas Würthinger - initial implementation.
  • Kerstin Breitender - contributor.
  • Christoph Wimberger - contributor.

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