25

I'm trying to create an array of bytes whose length is UInt32.MaxValue. This array is essentially a small(ish) in-memory database:

byte[] countryCodes = new byte[UInt32.MaxValue];

On my machine, however, at run-time, I get a System.OverflowException with "Arithmetic operation resulted in an overflow".

What's the deal? Do I need to use an unsafe block and malloc? How would I do that in C#?

1
  • 10
    I had no idea there were so many countries!
    – James
    Jun 10, 2015 at 21:47

4 Answers 4

37

The current implementation of System.Array uses Int32 for all its internal counters etc, so the theoretical maximum number of elements is Int32.MaxValue.

There's also a 2GB max-size-per-object limit imposed by the Microsoft CLR.

A good discussion and workaround here...

And a few related, not-quite-duplicate, questions and answers here...

14

On .NET 4.5 The maximum instantiatable length of a byte array is: 2147483591, or 56 less than int.MaxValue. Found via:

for (int i = int.MaxValue; i > 0; i--)
{
    try
    {
        byte[] b = new byte[i];
        Console.Out.WriteLine("MaxValue: " + i);
        Environment.Exit(0);
    }
    catch (Exception ignored)
    {}
}
3

Maximum length of a byte array is: 2130702268. for example:

var countryCodes = new byte[2130702268];
-1

I wouldn't do this in the first place. Why would you want to set all that memory aside for this in-memory database? Wouldn't you rather want either a data structure which size increments as you go along (e.g. List<int>)? Or (if preferred) use an in-memory database like sqlite?

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