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A reference to an Object on a 32 bit JVM (at least on Hotspot) takes up 4 bytes.

Does the 64 bit Hotspot JVM need 8 bytes? Or is some clever compression going on? If not, every Object[] would require twice as much heap memory, which I somehow think (hope, expect) is not the case.

Update/extra question: Does this really matter, or is this a negligible increase, because most references point to objects that are much larger than a few bytes (whereas one might argue that those objects are in turn mostly comprised of references to other objects)?

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You might find this helpful - stackoverflow.com/questions/1443677/… – Vineet Reynolds Sep 17 '10 at 7:18
And this one: stackoverflow.com/questions/783662/… – Thilo Sep 17 '10 at 7:34
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Just to give a data point, when we switched our webapp from 32-bit to 64-bit JVM, heap usage went up by ~30%. Your mileage may vary, but that at least gives you a ballpark. – Cowan Sep 17 '10 at 21:32

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up vote 9 down vote accepted

In a 64-bit system, object references are typically 8-byte long. But in recent JVMs from Sun/Oracle you can enable Compressed Oops, which reduce reference size to 4 bytes at the cost of a smaller limit on heap size.

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+1, interesting! – aioobe Sep 17 '10 at 7:18

According to Java Platform Performance it is not strictly defined, but typically 8 bytes on a 64-bit system:

The size of a reference isn't well defined, but it is typically 4 bytes on a 32-bit system and 8 bytes on a 64-bit system.

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So how does Hotspot handle this? If every reference is 8 bytes, that would mean a much higher heap requirement. – Thilo Sep 17 '10 at 6:57
Beats me. Haven't thought of it. Isn't it negligible, though? Usually, each object stores something which most of the time exceeds those 8 bytes. Sure, for small objects I can see that it could be an issue, but perhaps one would be better of with a primitive in such cases. – aioobe Sep 17 '10 at 7:00
The book has a section (on the same page) Measuring Object Size describing how to measure sizes of objects. Perhaps you could give it a try and report back. – aioobe Sep 17 '10 at 7:04
Well, most of the things my objects store are pointers to other objects, so those would double, too. The only thing that does not grow would be primitives and things like String (which is basically a char[]) – Thilo Sep 17 '10 at 7:05

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