Here's what I thought:
- JVM copy the string from file system into main memory.
- JVM copy the string from main memory into Java heap.
- Use it.
An I right ? I mean, there's actually two step copy.
Here's what I thought:
An I right ? I mean, there's actually two step copy.
veaThere could be more than 2 copies. Very much depends on how you are reading.
Consider the common case of a FileReader wrapped in a BufferedReader.
When you call BufferedReader.readLine() you get three copies.
1) The BufferedReader is empty (to start) so it call read(char[]) on the FileReader.
2) The FileReader (at the C layer of the JVM) make a read() system call into a uint8[] buffer. (copy 1)
3) Best case FileReader then converts the unit8[] contents and copies the result into the char[] provided by the BufferedReader (copy 2). (Note this copy would still be present even if we have an InputStreams and the result was a byte[] instead of a string.)
4) The readLine() then copies the char[] up to the end of the line into a String. (copy 3).
For most things you don't need to worry about all of the copying. The buffers are small and the overhead is minimal.
Rob
When a Java program started Java Virtual Machine gets some memory from Operating System.
Java Virtual Machine or JVM uses this memory for all its need and part of this memory is call java heap memory.
Heap in Java generally located at bottom of address space and move upwards.
Whenever we create object using new operator or by any another means object is allocated memory from Heap and When object dies or garbage collected ,memory goes back to Heap space in Java.
Java Heap could be in the main memory (RAM) or in disk or both depending on your operating system configuration.