

This can be helpful for developers to show how code in one part of an application interacts with other parts. The Dependency View can show the relationships between packages within a stack trace. The most significant change introduced with JMC 8.3 is the addition of the Dependency View. For the Flame View, in the top right there is a drop-down that provides different option samples for filtering the data. The Flame View has received similar updates to the Graph View in that it, too, now has options that limit the data displayed on the view.

In the below example, the node graph, which would be over 80 nodes, has been pruned down to the 10 most important nodes selected by JMC. A drop-down in the top right of the view panel provides different options for how the node graph will be pruned. The Graph View was updated to allow limiting the number of nodes displayed. The Flame, Graph, and Heat Map views introduced in earlier versions of JMC 8 are now supported on all major OS platforms (Windows, Mac, Linux). Let’s take a look at some of the key changes introduced in that release. In November 2022, a new minor version of JMC was released, 8.3. JDK Mission Control, JMC, is a control panel for managing, monitoring, and troubleshooting JVM applications.
