It's not an exception; it's an error: java.lang.OutOfMemoryError
You can catch it as it descends from Throwable
:
try {
// create lots of objects here and stash them somewhere
} catch (OutOfMemoryError E) {
// release some (all) of the above objects
}
However, unless you're doing some rather specific stuff (allocating tons of things within a specific code section, for example) you likely won't be able to catch it as you won't know where it's going to be thrown from.
If the root cause of your problem is a memory leak, then the chances are that catching and recovering from the OOM will not reclaim the leaked memory. You application will keep going for a bit then OOM again, and again, and again at ever reducing intervals.
There is probably at least one good time to catch an OutOfMemoryError
, when you are specifically allocating something that might be way too big: