If I create a buffer via ByteBuffer.allocateDirect()
, the memory exists outside of the Java heap. Is there a way to measure this kind of memory usage from my application in a cross-platform way similar to how I can measure Java heap usage with Runtime.totalMemory()
and Runtime.freeMemory()
?
You can use reflections to get Bits.reservedMemory
on OpenJDK/HotSpot Java 7. There is no platform independent way and this only shows you the usage via ByteBuffer.allocateDirect() not any other way of allocating native memory.
An alternative is to parse /proc/{pid}/maps
and exclude file mappings. This is an approximation of the virtual memory your process is using.
-
7I was able to get the value with
sun.misc.SharedSecrets.getJavaNioAccess().getDirectBufferPool().getMemoryUsed()
andsun.misc.VM.maxDirectMemory()
. Better or worse than reflection? – martinez314 Nov 20 '13 at 17:03 -
-
2Just a side note,
SharedSecrets
will not show you used memory if it is allocated via low-levelUnsafe.allocateMemory()
, in this case, you should either track/count allocated memory yourself or parse/proc/{pid}/maps
as in the answer. – Zaur Guliyev Mar 9 '18 at 15:13 -
1@ZaurGuliyev for more detail
/proc/self/smaps
which will even include how much memory is private and in memory vs on disk. – Peter Lawrey Mar 11 '18 at 15:47
You can use MXBeans to get the memory used by the direct byte buffers and mapped byte buffers:
List<BufferPoolMXBean> pools = ManagementFactory.getPlatformMXBeans(BufferPoolMXBean.class);
for (BufferPoolMXBean pool : pools) {
System.out.println(pool.getName());
System.out.println(pool.getCount());
System.out.println("memory used " + toMB(pool.getMemoryUsed()));
System.out.println("total capacity" + toMB(pool.getTotalCapacity()));
System.out.println();
}
prints something like:
direct
122
memory used 456.1562509536743 MB
total capacity456.15625 MB
mapped
0
memory used 0.0 MB
total capacity0.0 MB
where toMB function is this:
private static String toMB(long init) {
return (Long.valueOf(init).doubleValue() / (1024 * 1024)) + " MB";
}
However, I am not 100% sure if direct byte buffers are the only things that can live in the direct memory. Perhaps there are other things...