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It says here that -Xss is used to "set thread stack size", what does it mean exactly? Could anyone help me understand this?

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5 Answers 5

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Each thread in a Java application has its own stack. The stack is used to hold return addresses, function/method call arguments, etc. So if a thread tends to process large structures via recursive algorithms, it may need a large stack for all those return addresses and such. With the Sun JVM, you can set that size via that parameter.

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    So, The -Xss option is used to limit how much memory a stack consumes (by storing return addresses, variables etc) and which also indirectly limits how deep a stack can get? Am I correct? Feb 11, 2011 at 10:32
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    @instantsetsuna: I think the more common use is probably to increase the default limit. (There's always a limit.) But yes, you're controlling the size of the stack, which controls how deep the stack can get. Feb 11, 2011 at 10:34
  • how do you do the equivalent of this XSS setting on the java compiler (aka javac)? Its an issue for those who use scala-based libraries that cause large tail recursion to happen in the compilation of the classes – Andrew Norman 9 secs ago Apr 19, 2018 at 21:15
  • @AndrewNorman: You don't compile Java runtime options into the class file, that's more an environment-specific thing. If you really need to do it in code, you can write a tiny main class whose sole job is to launch your real application with the options you need. Apr 20, 2018 at 6:59
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    @AndrewNorman You can give JVM configuration flags the compiler should run with using -Jflag syntax (eg. -J-Xss).
    – francoisr
    Jun 26, 2018 at 8:48
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It indeed sets the stack size on a JVM.

You should touch it in either of these two situations:

  • StackOverflowError (the stack size is greater than the limit), increase the value
  • OutOfMemoryError: unable to create new native thread (too many threads, each thread has a large stack), decrease it.

The latter usually comes when your Xss is set too large - then you need to balance it (testing!)

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    Not necessarily every time actually. Both SOE and OOME could occur because of different reasons that should be fixed differently.
    – koders
    Jun 2, 2015 at 21:24
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    True, but I didn't say -Xss is the only cause for SOE and OOME, but the other way round - if set incorrectly, it can cause one of the two. Jun 3, 2015 at 13:48
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Each thread has a stack which used for local variables and internal values. The stack size limits how deep your calls can be. Generally this is not something you need to change.

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If I am not mistaken, this is what tells the JVM how much successive calls it will accept before issuing a StackOverflowError. Not something you wish to change generally.

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Add my two cents here, besides what mentioned, we can write a simple demo to show the effect of setting Xss.

Generally speaking, it controls the stack size arranged to each thread.

    public static void main(String[] args) {
        try{
            recur();
        }catch (StackOverflowError e){
            System.out.println(depth);
        }
    }

    static int depth = 1;

    public static void recur(){
        depth++;
        recur();
    }

After compiling above code, you will see the depth (the invoke hierachy) grows together with the passed Xss settings.

The output of java -Xss1m com.eugene.Main is 21638 and the output of java -Xss2m com.eugene.Main is 48325 at my local machine.

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