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I know what all gets garbage collected. But what exactly tells JRE that it is time for garbage collection? Is it like some event or time interval?

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    Surely someone has asked this before...yep.
    – Ben
    Jul 5, 2013 at 7:34

6 Answers 6

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HotSpot's garbage collection has grown into an exceedingly complex business, which even its creators struggle to understand in full detail. Therefore you can't be given a simple answer; some triggers are:

  1. occupation of each object generation reaching a threshold;
  2. a memory allocation request in a specific generation failing;
  3. overall heap occupation reaching a threshold.

Note that you haven't even specified what kind of garbage collection you are interested in: there is a minor collection and a major collection, and technologically they are very different. You have also not specified which Garbage Collector you have in mind: HotSpot has four of them to choose from.

If you are a beginner with Java, the best advice to give is a) in day-to-day programming, don't worry about it; and b) if you want to learn, you'll have to dig deep.

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I thing as a good practices dont fully depend on GC,See THIS OR THIS

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The JVM controls the Garbage collector, it decides when to run the Garbage Collector. It will run the GC when it realizes that the memory is running low or an object become eligible for GC when no live thread can access it.

But this behavior of JVM cannot be guaranteed, one can request the GC to happen from within the java program but there is no guarantee that this request will be taken care by JVM.

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    The first part is right, Java will do GC when memory runs low. But Java does not know when an object becomes eligible for GC (this decision is made in the GC itself). If a mark/sweep collector is used, it will of course mark dead objects and run a sweep on them if necessary, but that is part of GC.
    – pushy
    Jul 5, 2013 at 7:44
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    @pushy: you're right, I misunderstood between when an object eligible for GC and when the JVM runs GC, thanks for the note .
    – Azad
    Jul 5, 2013 at 7:51
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Garbage collection in java happen when JVM thinks it needs a garbage collection based on Java heap size.

But you can force GC to collect garbage using

System.gc () 

or

Runtime.gc () 

But it’s not guaranteed that garbage collection will happen.

Read more: http://javarevisited.blogspot.com/2011/04/garbage-collection-in-java.html#ixzz2Y9gKzQE1

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    You are not "forcing" garbage collection. As you say yourself: there is no guarantee. I think request is the better word here. Jul 5, 2013 at 8:04
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You can use System.gc(); but there's no guarantee that it'll run (it just "suggests" to the GC to run).

The JVM has different implementations, including the GC which can be run in different modes, and has very complex algorithms which usually work pretty good, that said, if you have a special usage (or special events, like after a restart of a platform) - you can tune it using flags (like: minimum heap size, maximum heap size and etc), but even without doing so, the GC collects objects that have null reference (pointers that points to them) whenever there's a need to free memory from the heap.

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  • You really should not use System.gc. The JVM knows better when to do GC than you do. There are some corner cases where it can be justified calling System.gc but most of the time developers should not do it.
    – pushy
    Jul 5, 2013 at 7:40
  • @pushy totally agree with you!
    – Nir Alfasi
    Jul 5, 2013 at 7:41
  • I'm inclined to believe that System.gc() does way more than just suggest something. I noticed that measuring my Runtime.freeMemory() every 10s it was declining over many minutes to get freed "randomly". Adding a System.gc() every 10s basically kills most of my freeMemory() from the start.
    – Giszmo
    Jul 14, 2022 at 18:46
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    @Giszmo even though you responded to a comment from almost 10 years ago, I believe that the recommendation is still the same: don't use System.gc()
    – Nir Alfasi
    Jul 18, 2022 at 14:24
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object has null reference then it will garbage collected. but GC does not give guarantee like when it is done.

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