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I heard from someone that the maximum array size in .NET is 4 GB? Just wondering if that is true. You wouldn't dream of doing this on 32-bit .NET but on a 64-bit system with 12 GB of RAM, maybe, just maybe you might want to do this. :-)

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3 Answers 3

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An array could theoretically have at most 2,147,483,647 elements, since it uses an int for indexing. The actual limit is slightly lower than this, depending on the type contained within the array.

However, there is a 2GB maximum single object restriction in the .NET CLR, even in 64bit. This was done by design.

You can easily make an IList<T> implementation that, internally, keeps multiple arrays, and allows you to grow beyond the 2GB single object limit, but there is not one in the framework itself.

Typically, however, this is not a real problem. Most of the time, you'll have arrays pointing to large classes - so the array is just holding references. This would mean your array can effectively point to many, many GBs of memory - but the array itself cannot be >2GB.


Note that, as of .NET 4.5, there is a new option available where 64bit applications can opt-in: gcAllowVeryLargeObjects. With this new option set, it is possible to get UInt32.MaxValue (4,294,967,295) elements in a multi-dimensional array, though a single dimensional array is still limited to 2,146,435,071 elements (2,147,483,591 for single byte arrays or arrays of a struct containing nothing ut a byte).

The new rules with this option are:

  • The maximum number of elements in an array is UInt32.MaxValue.
  • The maximum index in any single dimension is 2,147,483,591 (0x7FFFFFC7) for byte arrays and arrays of single-byte structures, and 2,146,435,071 (0X7FEFFFFF) for other types.
  • The maximum size for strings and other non-array objects is unchanged.
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  • Cant you index an array using a long (Int64)? You can certainly use Array.GetVaue() with a long which allows many more elements - which there could still be and the array would be < 2GB, for example in a bool[]
    – markmnl
    Nov 10, 2010 at 9:31
  • @Mrk Mnl: Yes, you can use long indexing, but the CLR implementation does not allow you to use arrays larger than int indexing anyways. Arrays in Microsoft's .NET implementation are always limited to 2147483647 elements. Nov 10, 2010 at 16:30
  • @Mrk Mnl: Most likely because it's not CLS compliant. Nov 11, 2010 at 18:04
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    Although the answer was correct at the time of writing, .NET 4.5 removes this limit - see Mark Gravell's answer. Jul 21, 2012 at 17:22
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    @IanGriffiths That changes the maximum SIZE of an array, but it still has maximum limits on # of items. I edited with more details and updating for 4.5. Jul 23, 2012 at 22:49
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In versions of .NET prior to 4.5, the maximum object size is 2GB. From 4.5 onwards you can allocate larger objects if gcAllowVeryLargeObjects is enabled. Note that the limit for string is not affected, but "arrays" should cover "lists" too, since lists are backed by arrays.

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  • How to do that on .net 5 console app?
    – Mohamed
    May 5, 2021 at 22:08
  • @Mohamed pretty sure it is enabled by default in .NET 6; might be in .NET 5 too May 6, 2021 at 11:17
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The maximum size of any one object in .NET is 2GB.

This, of course, puts a hard cap on how large you can make a raw array.

You can make an "array of arrays" (and even create your own indexer to access them as though it was one contiguous array) pretty much as large as you like if you define your own class for it.

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    Why then did Microsoft see fit to add LongLength to the array object in .NET 2.0?
    – Keith Hill
    Feb 26, 2010 at 0:50
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    @Keith: I suspect that was there for future-proofing, although it's not really usable in any meaningful way in the current CLR implementations (including CLR 4). Feb 26, 2010 at 0:53
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    @Keith: "Why did Microsoft add LongLength?" - I'd guess that it's because the 2GB object size limit is an implementation detail, not a contracted limit. It might also be that at some point they planned to up the limit, but found that the benefits weren't worth the problems they ran into (or something along those lines). Feb 26, 2010 at 0:56
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    As of .NET 4.5, LongLength is now useful - see Marc Gravell's answer Jul 21, 2012 at 17:21
  • This answer should be removed, it is just not valid any more Apr 27, 2015 at 21:27

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