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I need to know how much bytes my object consumes in memory (in C#). for example how much my Hashtable, or SortedList, or List<String>.

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6 Answers 6

179

this may not be accurate but its close enough for me

long size = 0;
object o = new object();
using (Stream s = new MemoryStream()) {
    BinaryFormatter formatter = new BinaryFormatter();
    formatter.Serialize(s, o);
    size = s.Length;
}
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  • 163
    This will put so much more. It adds the DLL name and version, ... this is not a way to calculate object size.
    – Aliostad
    Nov 1, 2011 at 14:36
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    I agree that this is NOT a good way to calculate object size. Serialization may be a rough estimate of entropy, but provides no useful information about memory consumption. This is a complex question without an easy solution. Jan 13, 2012 at 18:55
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    I tried your method with List<int> before and after populating with items and it didn't seem to work returning same value - 41. Would you know the reson for it?
    – user572559
    Jan 19, 2012 at 15:45
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    Lists in C# are preallocated to whatever sizes the framework designers decided to go with, and then increased when needed. By default it's probably something like 10 elements. So you won't notice any size difference until you add enough elements to require more memory to be allocated. Oct 24, 2012 at 22:59
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    Note that the object (o) has to be marked as serializable
    – Jaider
    Jan 5, 2017 at 22:03
138

I don't think you can get it directly, but there are a few ways to find it indirectly.

One way is to use the GC.GetTotalMemory method to measure the amount of memory used before and after creating your object. This won't be perfect, but as long as you control the rest of the application you may get the information you are interested in.

Apart from that you can use a profiler to get the information or you could use the profiling api to get the information in code. But that won't be easy to use I think.

See Find out how much memory is being used by an object in C#? for a similar question.

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    While the "true" answer may be "it can't be done," the better answer is the one that gives you a possible alternative. Jan 22, 2015 at 19:01
  • This worked well for me. In my case I was working with a very complex object that couldn't really be serialized easily, so the top ans was out of the question. I used this method with a for loop to get a rough average at each point. Helped me see the difference between when this entity didn't exist vs then it did. Delta == rough size of the entity.
    – mBrice1024
    Jul 15, 2017 at 14:45
  • Well, sometimes I get a number (which then matches other test runs), sometimes I dont. I just wanted to point that out. (Maybe GC was not finished before running the testapp again? I dont know... )
    – Jan
    Jan 8, 2020 at 14:28
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Unmanaged object:

  • Marshal.SizeOf(object yourObj);

Value Types:

  • sizeof(object val)

Managed object:

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    Link's dead, can you edit your answer?
    – Prolog
    Aug 22, 2019 at 16:10
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    It is interesting; I have checked Marshal.SizeOf(<bool variable set to false>) and it gave me 4... why if bools are size of 1?
    – Eru
    Nov 26, 2020 at 21:35
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    I think, there is 1 bit relevant but the framework still using the 4bytes or 8bytes (depending on ur architecture) .... You can read a detailed explanation here quora.com/…
    – Henry
    Jan 11, 2021 at 4:04
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OK, this question has been answered and answer accepted but someone asked me to put my answer so there you go.

First of all, it is not possible to say for sure. It is an internal implementation detail and not documented. However, based on the objects included in the other object. Now, how do we calculate the memory requirement for our cached objects?

I had previously touched this subject in this article:

Now, how do we calculate the memory requirement for our cached objects? Well, as most of you would know, Int32 and float are four bytes, double and DateTime 8 bytes, char is actually two bytes (not one byte), and so on. String is a bit more complex, 2*(n+1), where n is the length of the string. For objects, it will depend on their members: just sum up the memory requirement of all its members, remembering all object references are simply 4 byte pointers on a 32 bit box. Now, this is actually not quite true, we have not taken care of the overhead of each object in the heap. I am not sure if you need to be concerned about this, but I suppose, if you will be using lots of small objects, you would have to take the overhead into consideration. Each heap object costs as much as its primitive types, plus four bytes for object references (on a 32 bit machine, although BizTalk runs 32 bit on 64 bit machines as well), plus 4 bytes for the type object pointer, and I think 4 bytes for the sync block index. Why is this additional overhead important? Well, let’s imagine we have a class with two Int32 members; in this case, the memory requirement is 16 bytes and not 8.

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    This does not answer the question of the OP, how are we supposed to measure the size of a HashSet vs a List?
    – yoel halb
    Mar 6, 2018 at 16:19
  • @yoelhalb - it does answer, and fairly precisely. There isnt a one-statement or short answer to the question.
    – StingyJack
    Jan 27, 2019 at 15:09
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The following code fragment should return the size in bytes of any object passed to it, so long as it can be serialized. I got this from a colleague at Quixant to resolve a problem of writing to SRAM on a gaming platform. Hope it helps out. Credit and thanks to Carlo Vittuci.

/// <summary>
/// Calculates the lenght in bytes of an object 
/// and returns the size 
/// </summary>
/// <param name="TestObject"></param>
/// <returns></returns>
private int GetObjectSize(object TestObject)
{
    BinaryFormatter bf = new BinaryFormatter();
    MemoryStream ms = new MemoryStream();
    byte[] Array;
    bf.Serialize(ms, TestObject);
    Array = ms.ToArray();
    return Array.Length;
}
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    Didn't work for me. I didn't have the object class defined as serializable and it threw a "Not marked as serializable error" Nov 29, 2012 at 20:23
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    Hi @Kevin Hirst, i tried with this that parsed my dataset to get the size in bytes. Its return me Out of memory exception. I find out that bytes max size is 2 GB ? Have any idea how to manage it?
    – Worgon
    Apr 24, 2013 at 8:21
  • @Worgon, do you really need to know how big is your dataset except investigational purposes? I'd rather think up a level, to eliminate such a necessity. If you insist, you might think about meausuring of particular datarow size or use abovementioned GC.GetTotalMemory approach. May 28, 2013 at 7:42
  • @Worgon 2GB is a memory size of .NET environment for your Application. You can't easily mange it - only store big objects in other heap.
    – VMAtm
    Jun 6, 2014 at 6:49
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    This is a copy of the most voted answer, which has it's problem, but this code has several issues, first the binaryformatter is slow, but then there is a memory stream without using, then a copy of the data to an array.
    – NiKiZe
    Sep 28, 2020 at 9:43
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In debug mode

load SOS

and execute dumpheap command.

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