After making some changes to an application it suffered a significant performance degradation and on investigation one of the most frequently called methods is no longer being compiled.  Turning on: -XX:+LogCompilation shows that before the change, this method was: queued for compilation, compiled, and then successfully inlined into callers; whereas after the change, there is no record of a compilation attempt and the inlining attempt says:
inline_fail reason='not compilable (disabled)'
The original method is as follows, where _maxRepeats is an instance variable declared as a Map (no generics, code written a long time ago), used such that the key was an object of class DadNode and the value was an Integer.
  private int cnsGetMaxRepeats(DadNode dn) {
    if (_maxRepeats != null) {
      Integer max = (Integer)_maxRepeats.get(dn);
      if (max != null) {
        return max;
      }
    }
    return dn.getMaxOccurs().getValue();
  }
The amendment involved changing the _maxRepeats map to use generics:
  Map<Integer, Integer>
and a new parameter was added to the method:
   private int cnsGetMaxRepeats(int childIdx, DadNode dn) {
    if (_maxRepeats != null) {
      Integer max = _maxRepeats.get(childIdx);
      if (max != null) {
        return max;
      }
    }
    return dn.getMaxOccurs().getValue();
  }
Using explicit calls to Integer.valueOf and Integer.intValue to avoid autoboxing make no difference; the method is still not compilable.
I can "poke it with a stick" until I get a solution which does what I want (and is also compilable), but what are the criteria behind this disabling?
I think a basic mistake on my part - the log with the "compilation disabled" method was produced when running debug through IntelliJ (although with breakpoints muted). I expect IntelliJ disables compilations for methods with breakpoints in, even when muted.
So to answer my own question, I have no reason to think that anything apart from explicitly disabling compilation will do so.
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