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Is there a way of estimating (roughly) in memory object size from Serialized object size in Java

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The size in memory will be usually between half and double the serializable size. The most extreme example might be the Byte which is more than 80 bytes Serialized can be 16 bytes in memory.

You can use a profiler to tell you how much memory an object uses. Another way is to use a tool based on Instrumentation.getObjectSize(object)

You might find this interesting Getting the size of an Object

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  • interesting,why bytes is so different. and it is five times larger compared to in memory. Do you have any reference link? +1
    – Clark Bao
    Aug 22, 2011 at 12:33
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    Serialization uses a standard format with a header, classes encoded, and their parents. Instead of trying to read a guide on the internal representation of Java Serialization, which I don't belive is an open standard you would learn a lot more by trying it. Aug 22, 2011 at 12:39
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    To do that you need to how you want to encode each value/field, in which case you should be able to calculate how larger the encoded value will be. This doesn't give you any idea how large is the header, or the impact of the memory alignment of allocation. Aug 22, 2011 at 12:53
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    A byte[] uses about 12 bytes plus the length. Most JVMs are 8-byte aligned so you need to round up to the next 8 bytes. Aug 22, 2011 at 13:23
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    @krumpelstiltskin A simple example is a String which uses UTF-8 encoding when serialized. A long ASCII chars string will be 1 byte per char (plus a fixed size header), however in memory it will be one char (2 bytes) per char (unless compressing strings are used) Jun 22, 2018 at 19:08
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A very nice Tool for this challenge: https://github.com/jbellis/jamm

From the readme.txt:

MemoryMeter is as accurate as java.lang.instrument.Instrumentation.getObjectSize, which only claims to provide "approximate" results, but in practice seems to work as expected.

MemoryMeter uses reflection to crawl the object graph for measureDeep. Reflection is slow: measuring a one-million object Cassandra Memtable (that is, 1 million children from MemoryMeter.countChildren) took about 5 seconds wall clock time.

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