# Do Java arrays have a maximum size?

Is there a limit to the number of elements a Java array can contain? If so, what is it?

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You've accepted a wrong answer, just try to allocate such a long array (and no, I'm not running out of memory). –  maaartinus Sep 28 '12 at 22:06

Haven't seen the right answer, even though it's very easy to test.

In a recent HotSpot VM, the correct answer is Integer.MAX_VALUE - 5. Once you go beyond that:

public class Foo {
public static void main(String[] args) {
Object[] array = new Object[Integer.MAX_VALUE - 4];
}
}


You get:

Exception in thread "main" java.lang.OutOfMemoryError:
Requested array size exceeds VM limit

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I think the idea of downvotes makes no sense unless we are willing to downvote answers that are plain and simply wrong. Does the difference of five bytes actually matter in the real world, NO, of course not. But it concerns me that people are willing to give an answer "authoritatively" without even trying it to see if it really works. As for the memory limit, well, DUH. That's like if you asked me "how many grapes can you eat?" and I said "well, it depends on how many I have in the fridge at the time." –  Kevin Bourrillion Jun 16 '10 at 15:30
Sry I'm not understanding your answer.. do you mean to say that the maximum is MAX_VALUE - 5 even if my machine has the required memory to create an int the size of MAX_VALUE ? –  Pacerier Dec 3 '11 at 20:03
@Pacerier, yes, the memory address index is 32bit and there is an object header+length, so they still need to be addressed by that 32bit index. –  bestsss Jan 1 '12 at 9:42
Do you happen to know why it won't give you those five bytes? Is this necessarily something that always happens in Java, or could it just be related to your computer's memory or something? –  Taymon Jan 1 '12 at 9:44
@Kevin Bourrillion: This seems to have changed, using Oracle 1.7.0_07 I can allocate up to MAX_VALUE-2 elements. This is independent of what I allocate, and I really wonder what can the VM use the two "things" for (the length doesn't fit in 2 bytes). –  maaartinus Sep 28 '12 at 21:58

Some VMs reserve some header words in an array. The maximum "safe" number would be 2 147 483 639 (Integer.MAX_VALUE - 8). Attempts to allocate larger arrays may result in java.lang.OutOfMemoryError.

If you have the source code for the java classes, checkout java.util.ArrayList.class (line 190):

  /**
* The maximum size of array to allocate.
* Some VMs reserve some header words in an array.
* Attempts to allocate larger arrays may result in
* OutOfMemoryError: Requested array size exceeds VM limit
*/
private static final int MAX_ARRAY_SIZE = Integer.MAX_VALUE - 8;

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There are actually two limits. One, the maximum element indexable for the array and, two, the amount of memory available to your application. Depending on the amount of memory available and the amount used by other data structures, you may hit the memory limit before you reach the maximum addressable array element.

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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Criticism_of_Java#Large_arrays

Java has been criticized for not supporting arrays of more than 2^31−1 (about 2.1 billion) elements. This is a limitation of the language; the Java Language Specification, Section 10.4, states that:

Arrays must be indexed by int values... An attempt to access an array component with a long index value results in a compile-time error.

Supporting large arrays would also require changes to the JVM. This limitation manifests itself in areas such as collections being limited to 2 billion elements and the inability to memory map files larger than 2 GB. Java also lacks true multidimensional arrays (contiguously allocated single blocks of memory accessed by a single indirection), which limits performance for scientific and technical computing.

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Maximum number of elements of an array is (2^31)−1 or 2 147 483 647

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The closest I have come to maximum array size is:

valid = 256901116


Using the following statements:

System.out.println("valid = " + (int)(Integer.MAX_VALUE / 8.35918377));
System.out.println("invalid = " + (int)(Integer.MAX_VALUE / 8.35918376));
Object[] temparray = new Object[(int)(Integer.MAX_VALUE / 8.35918377)];

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When I tried to load a 2.7 GB file to a byte array, Java gave out of memory error with heap size exceeded fault. It gave that error because array size exceeds MAX_INTEGER for a 2.7 GB file. When I tried less one with 1 GB, Java gave out of memory with VM limit exceeded. Size of array is just half of MAX_INTEGER (~1.1 billion). When I looked at some web resource, they adviced trying to find it with experiment on self platform. Also they stated that maximum array size is about 1.1 billion and higher size cause to VM limit exceeded error.

Note: Initialization doesnt give error, it gives error at runtime when loading file to byte array.

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I think there is no limited size to declare integer in array but it must be within a integer value i.e. 2147483639.

If i'm wrong than somebody help me to guide about that.

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(As a tip, it's generally not a good idea to post an answer if you're not sure you're right. People will usually downvote an answer if they know that it's wrong. Plus, if other people looking for help stumble on this question later, an incorrect or even unsure answer isn't likely to help them.) –  Dennis Meng Dec 27 '13 at 2:29