How do I set Java's min and max heap size through environment variables?
I know that the heap sizes can be set when launching java, but I would like to have this adjusted through environment variables on my server.
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You can't do it using environment variables. It's done via "non standard" options. Run:
java -Xfor details. The options you're looking for are-Xmxand-Xms(this is "initial" heap size, so probably what you're looking for.)abyx : Rip off from accepted answer?: no, posted before the accepted answer. Have a little bit too much time on your hands, sheriff? -
I think your only option is to wrap java in a script that substitutes the environment variables into the command line
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You can't do it using environment variables directly. You need to use the set of "non standard" options that are passed to the java command. Run: java -X for details. The options you're looking for are -Xmx and -Xms (this is "initial" heap size, so probably what you're looking for.)
Some products like Ant or Tomcat might come with a batch script that looks for the JAVA_OPTS environment variable, but it's not part of the Java runtime. If you are using one of those products, you may be able to set the variable like:
set JAVA_OPTS="-Xms128m -Xmx256m"
You can also take this approach with your own command line like:
set JAVA_OPTS="-Xms128m -Xmx256m"
java ${JAVA_OPTS} MyClass -
Is there a max. size you can set Xmx to? I set it to 1024m and eclipse opens ok. When I set it above 1024, eclipse doesn't open and I get the error "jvm terminated. Exit code=-1"... I was doing this because I keep getting an "java.lang.OutOfMemoryError: Java heap space". I am reading in a 35.5Mb .txt file and this error occurs when it's just reading in the file using the "while((line = reader.readLine()) != null)" loop. I would have thought that 1024mb would have been enough. Can anyone help me?
pkaeding : If you have a new question, please ask it using the 'Ask Question' button at the top right of every page on the site. -
A couple of notes:
Apache ant doesn't know anything about JAVA_OPTS, while Tomcat's startup scripts do. For Apache ant, use ANT_OPTS to affect the environment for the JVM that runs /ant/, but not for the things that ant might launch.
The maximum heap size you can set depends entirely on the environment: for most 32-bit systems, the maximum amount of heap space you can request, regardless of available memory, is in the 2GiB range. The largest heap on a 64-bit system is "really big". Also, you are practically limited by physical memory as well, since the heap is managed by the JVM and you don't want a lot of swapping going on to the disk.
For server environments, you typically want to set -Xms and -Xmx to the same value: this will fix the size of the heap at a certain size and the garbage collector has less work to do because the heap will never have to be re-sized.
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