A: 

I am not 100% sure it'll work (it sounds like it will) and I am not sure it'll show it in the format you want... but have you thought about the VisualVM?

I believe it'll open up the resulting file.

TofuBeer
VisualVM apparently only loads "heap dump" information (not profiling data) out of hprof files and apppears to hang loading said file anyhow. Have you had success with this? I'm really looking for something >= HPJmeter that works :-)
David Citron
Unfortunately I haven't used it yet... just aware of it. Have you tried using Visual VM to do the profiling (but it sounds like you really want an offline viewer)?
TofuBeer
Yeah, there are certainly a variety of tools I could use to profile locally, but it would be nice to have something that could display the hprof files offline. HPJmeter is sooo close, if I could only get it to work. I wish they distributed the source code.
David Citron
+2  A: 

Your Kit Java Profiler is able to read hprof snapshots (I am not sure if only for memory profiling or for CPU as well). It is not free but is by far the best java profiler I ever used. It presents the results in a clear, intuitive way and performs well on large data sets. The documentation is also pretty good.

Bogdan
It would appear from their documentation that they only support memory-related portions of the HPROF file: http://www.yourkit.com/docs/80/help/hprof_snapshots.jsp -- thanks for the reference, though; it looks like a good profiler.
David Citron
A: 

I have been using Eclipse Memory Analyzer for analyzing different performance problems successfully. First of all, install the tool as described in the project webpage in Eclipse.

After that, you can create a dump file knowing the pid of the jvm to be analyzed

jmap -dump:format=b,file=<filename>.hprof <jvm_pid>

Then just import the .hprof file in eclipse. It has some automatic reports that try (for me they usually do not work) to point out which could be the possible problems.

Edit:

Answering the comment: You are right, it is more like a leak finder for Java. For performance problems, I have played with JRat for small projects. It shows time comsumed per method, number of times a method is called, hierarchy of calls, etc. The only problem is that as far as I know, it does not support .hprof files. To use it, yo need to execute your program adding a VM argument

-javaagent:<path>/shiftone-jrat.jar

This will generate a directory with the profile captured by the tool. Then, execute

 java -jar shiftone-jrat.jar

And open the trace. Even been a simple tool, I think it could be useful.

Daniel H.
I played with the MAT a while ago, but my recollection is that it only analyzes the HEAP DUMP portion of the hprof file, not the performance-profiling portion. Have they added that functionaliy?
David Citron
A: 

For viewing and analyzing the output of hprof=samples or hprof=cpu I have used PerfAnal with good results. The GUI is a bit spartan, but very useful.

PerfAnal is a free download (GPL, originally an example project in the book Java Programming on Linux). See this article:

http://java.sun.com/developer/technicalArticles/Programming/perfanal/

for more information and the download.

Normally you can just run

java -jar PerfAnal.jar hprof.java.txt

You may need to fiddle with -Xmx for large hprof files.

sleske