jtzero
jtzero

Reputation: 2254

Is the hotspot JVM Bytecode Interpreter a tracing JIT?

The question pretty much says it all, I've been looking around for an answer even through the VM spec but I it doesn't explicitly state it.

Upvotes: 5

Views: 1536

Answers (4)

Stephen C
Stephen C

Reputation: 718708

Aside: for those who don't know what a tracing JIT is, the following description comes from this page:

Although tracing JITs are a complex technology, the core concept is about optimizing execution of the hot paths in a program. The emphasis is specifically on hot paths that return to the start of a path which sounds very much like a loop. However, the traditional definition of a programming loop is only a subset of these hot paths. The broader definition includes code that spans methods and possibly even modules. This broader definition of a loop is what’s called a trace.

Upvotes: 3

user207421
user207421

Reputation: 310860

It's not even a JIT actually, let alone a 'tracing JIT', whatever that might be.

Upvotes: 0

Jörg W Mittag
Jörg W Mittag

Reputation: 369428

No.

There are some other JVMs with tracing JITs, though: HotPath and Maxine, for example.

Upvotes: 4

Tom Hawtin - tackline
Tom Hawtin - tackline

Reputation: 147124

Had to google what a "tracing JIT" was, but apparently it isn't.

> non-tracing JIT implementations (Sun’s Java VM

But it does optimise what you might call "hot spots".

How bytecode is optimised will not be part of the specification for the bytecode.

Upvotes: 2

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