JPerf is a fork of the abandoned Perf4J project.
JPerf is a set of utilities for calculating and displaying performance statistics for Java code. For developers who are familiar with logging frameworks such as log4j or logback, an analogy helps to describe JPerf:
JPerf is to System.currentTimeMillis() as log4j is to System.out.println()
How is this relevant to JPerf? Consider that before good logging frameworks were widely available, developers new to Java would often print debugging statements using System.out.println(). Later they would discover they wanted log statements to go to a dedicated file, perhaps a log file that was rolled daily. Then they would discover they wanted finer control of which log statements would be written, and they wanted it to be possible to only have some log statements written in some environments without changing any code. Thus, the full set of features that log4j provides comes out of the original desire to have a "better" System.out.println() for logging statements.
Similarly, when new Java developers discover that they need to time specified blocks of code for performance logging and monitoring reasons, they often do something like this:
long start = System.currentTimeMillis(); // execute the block of code to be timed System.out.println("ms for block n was: " + (System.currentTimeMillis() - start));
Later on, though, these developers find they want more information, such as aggregated performance statistics like mean, minimum, maximum, standard deviation and transactions per second over a set time span. They would like graphs of these values in real time to detect problems on a running server, or they would like to expose performance metrics through JMX. In addition, they want their timing statements to work with the common logging frameworks like log4j (and, more recently, SLF4J).
JPerf provides these features and more:
See the Developer Guide to get started, or download JPerf now.
Recently released (2014-12-01) version 0.9.19 of JPerf includes commits since the last Perf4J release 0.9.16 in 2011.
JPerf is a fork of the abandoned Perf4J project. Next up is to rebrand it as JPerf completely and continue with development and bug fixes that are long overdue.
If there are missing features you would like added, please let us know either on github or by sending an email to contact@jperf.net, or better yet, download the source code and become a contributor and sending pull-requests.