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I'm inexperienced with advanced Java so please bear with me.

I'm curious about Java's ability to implement features that may be termed "autonomic". Say we have two Java programs running. And one program determines that the other one is hogging memory, and thus kills that program and/or allocates more memory to the JVM.

I know in Java you can see what the available memory is (see How to do I check CPU and Memory Usage in Java?), but what if we want to dig deeper?

Thank You.

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  • If you're still interested in the "autonomic" features that can be implemented within Java (not just at the command-line level as @Sam suggested), perhaps my answer might be of help.
    – HQCasanova
    Nov 3, 2013 at 13:04

4 Answers 4

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You Asked:-is it possible to increase the JVM's available memory and/or kill other Java programs?

  1. Yes It is Possible You can increase the heap size of jvm like :

          java -Xmx512M ClassName //512M = memory you want to increase
    
  2. To Kill a Process like : taskkill /F /IM <processname>.exe

Note
->but its not a good idea because the heap may be of a fixed size or may be expanded depending on the garbage collector's policy.
->open your Command prompt type taskkill/? to know the details.

3 . And You can check total memory , free memory and max memory currently reserved by jvm in this way.

          int  MegaBytes = 1024*1024 ;

          long  freeMemory = Runtime.getRuntime().freeMemory() / MegaBytes;
          long  totalMemory = Runtime.getRuntime().totalMemory() / MegaBytes;
          long  maxMemory = Runtime.getRuntime().maxMemory() / MegaBytes;

          System.out.println("Memory used by JVM: " + (maxMemory - freeMemory));
          System.out.println("freeMemory in JVM: " + freeMemory);
          System.out.println("totalMemory in JVM : " + totalMemory);
          System.out.println("maxMemory in JVM: " + maxMemory);

For more information please check here .

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  • indeed, it's often of more interest to increase the minimum RAM reserved
    – jwenting
    Jun 20, 2013 at 5:21
  • 3
    I think the OP wants to increase memory while the JVM is running.
    – Raedwald
    Jun 20, 2013 at 22:21
  • @sam hey this returning same value everytime i run it on, Memory used by JVM: 1656 freeMemory in JVM: 118 totalMemory in JVM : 119 maxMemory in JVM: 1774 Jul 1, 2013 at 8:59
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1. Increasing memory for JVM

You can specify the initial and the maximum heap size in Java using the following code..

java -Xms64m -Xmx256m ...

in this

-Xms<size> specifies the initial Java heap size
-Xmx<size> the maximum Java heap size.

2. Checking how much memory easy of your program uses

There is a very handly tool that is given you when you install jdk in your computer which shows how much memory, heap space all running java programs in taking in your computer.

Java Visual VM

http://docs.oracle.com/javase/6/docs/technotes/guides/visualvm/

you can find it in your installed bin folder of jdk.

A previous stackoverflow post should also help Monitoring own memory usage by Java application

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+50

Regarding the “autonomic” part of your question, it is indeed possible to do process management from within Java, albeit limited:

  • Assuming that all processes to be managed will have always been started from within your Java application using ProcessBuilder.start(), you can use the destroy() method on the process you want to kill. See this answer for more information.

  • Detecting when a process has too much memory implies being able to gather information about the process. The trouble is that information can only be accessed by the operating system. Inevitably, you'll have to use some kind of command or third party tool to get it. For further info, have a look at this other answer.

  • Although vaguely related, shutdown hooks allow you to do some critical chores automatically when the application closes. For instance, saving/closing any document(s)/file(s) left open. You can read more in this related answer.

Hope that helps.

1

You can try adding -XmsMBm when trying to run a program. eg java -Xms64m ClassName

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