You may use the Go testing tool to measure size of arbitrary complex data structures. This is detailed in this answer: How to get variable memory size of variable in golang?
To measure the size of a map created by make(map[string]int)
, use the following benchmark function:
var x map[string]int
func BenchmarkEmptyMap(b *testing.B) {
for i := 0; i < b.N; i++ {
x = make(map[string]int)
}
}
Executing with
go test -bench . -benchmem
The result is:
BenchmarkEmptyMap-4 20000000 110 ns/op 48 B/op 1 allocs/op
So the answer is on my 64-bit architecture: 48 bytes.
As hinted, size may depend on architecture. Also size may depend on the initial capacity you may pass to make()
, as you can see in this example:
func BenchmarkEmptyMapCap100(b *testing.B) {
for i := 0; i < b.N; i++ {
x = make(map[string]int, 100)
}
}
Output:
BenchmarkEmptyMapCap100-4 1000000 1783 ns/op 4176 B/op 3 allocs/op
A map of type map[string]int
with an initial capacity of 100 now requires 4176 bytes (on 64-bit arch).
The default initial capacity is around 7 if not specified explicitly.