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I'm trying to retrieve the amount of memory my iPhone app is using at anytime, programmatically. Yes I'm aware about ObjectAlloc/Leaks. I'm not interested in those, only to know if it's possible to write some code and get the amount of bytes being used and report it via NSLog.

Thanks.

0

8 Answers 8

137

To get the actual bytes of memory that your application is using, you can do something like the example below. However, you really should become familiar with the various profiling tools as well as they are designed to give you a much better picture of usage over-all.

#import <mach/mach.h>

// ...

void report_memory(void) {
  struct task_basic_info info;
  mach_msg_type_number_t size = TASK_BASIC_INFO_COUNT;
  kern_return_t kerr = task_info(mach_task_self(),
                                 TASK_BASIC_INFO,
                                 (task_info_t)&info,
                                 &size);
  if( kerr == KERN_SUCCESS ) {
    NSLog(@"Memory in use (in bytes): %lu", info.resident_size);
    NSLog(@"Memory in use (in MiB): %f", ((CGFloat)info.resident_size / 1048576));
  } else {
    NSLog(@"Error with task_info(): %s", mach_error_string(kerr));
  }
}

There is also a field in the structure info.virtual_size which will give you the number of bytes available virtual memory (or memory allocated to your application as potential virtual memory in any event). The code that pgb links to will give you the amount of memory available to the device and what type of memory it is.

17
  • 4
    thanks, exactly what I was searching for. Is this method app store safe?
    – Buju
    Jul 4, 2011 at 13:02
  • 3
    If you Cmd+Click task_basic_info, it seems that this should now not be used and replaced with mach_task_basic_info. My guess is that this version is not compatible with 64-bit architecture, but not really sure.
    – cprcrack
    Oct 30, 2013 at 18:16
  • 17
    In my case, the amount returned is over twice as much as the memory report in XCode puts out. Not sure what to make of it.
    – Morkrom
    Jan 16, 2014 at 19:43
  • 1
    How to get the memory usage by other applications? Jul 29, 2015 at 6:03
  • 2
    @Morkrom have you figured out why? I have the same problem around twice bigger running simulator and almost 3 times on a device.
    – Julian
    Oct 6, 2015 at 7:56
47

This has been tested on Xcode 11 in Mojave 10.4.6 on 07/01/2019, and on Xcode 11.3 as of 11/05/2020

All of the previous answers return the incorrect result.

Two Swift versions are below.

Here is how to get the expected value written by Apple's Quinn “The Eskimo!”.

This uses the phys_footprint var from Darwin > Mach > task_info and closely matches the value in the memory gauge in Xcode's Debug navigator.

The value returned is in bytes.

https://forums.developer.apple.com/thread/105088#357415

Original code follows.

func memoryFootprint() -> mach_vm_size_t? {  
    // The `TASK_VM_INFO_COUNT` and `TASK_VM_INFO_REV1_COUNT` macros are too  
    // complex for the Swift C importer, so we have to define them ourselves.  
    let TASK_VM_INFO_COUNT = mach_msg_type_number_t(MemoryLayout<task_vm_info_data_t>.size / MemoryLayout<integer_t>.size)  
    let TASK_VM_INFO_REV1_COUNT = mach_msg_type_number_t(MemoryLayout.offset(of: \task_vm_info_data_t.min_address)! / MemoryLayout<integer_t>.size)  
    var info = task_vm_info_data_t()  
    var count = TASK_VM_INFO_COUNT  
    let kr = withUnsafeMutablePointer(to: &info) { infoPtr in  
        infoPtr.withMemoryRebound(to: integer_t.self, capacity: Int(count)) { intPtr in  
            task_info(mach_task_self_, task_flavor_t(TASK_VM_INFO), intPtr, &count)  
        }  
    }  
    guard  
        kr == KERN_SUCCESS,  
        count >= TASK_VM_INFO_REV1_COUNT  
    else { return nil }  
    return info.phys_footprint  
}  

Modifying this slightly to create a class level set of Swift methods allows easy return of the actual bytes and formatted output in MB for display. I use this as part of an automated UITest suite to log memory used before and after multiple iterations of the same test to see if we have any potential leaks or allocations we need to look into.

//  Created by Alex Zavatone on 8/1/19.
//

class Memory: NSObject {

    // From Quinn the Eskimo at Apple.
    // https://forums.developer.apple.com/thread/105088#357415

    class func memoryFootprint() -> Float? {
        // The `TASK_VM_INFO_COUNT` and `TASK_VM_INFO_REV1_COUNT` macros are too
        // complex for the Swift C importer, so we have to define them ourselves.
        let TASK_VM_INFO_COUNT = mach_msg_type_number_t(MemoryLayout<task_vm_info_data_t>.size / MemoryLayout<integer_t>.size)
        let TASK_VM_INFO_REV1_COUNT = mach_msg_type_number_t(MemoryLayout.offset(of: \task_vm_info_data_t.min_address)! / MemoryLayout<integer_t>.size)
        var info = task_vm_info_data_t()
        var count = TASK_VM_INFO_COUNT
        let kr = withUnsafeMutablePointer(to: &info) { infoPtr in
            infoPtr.withMemoryRebound(to: integer_t.self, capacity: Int(count)) { intPtr in
                task_info(mach_task_self_, task_flavor_t(TASK_VM_INFO), intPtr, &count)
            }
        }
        guard
            kr == KERN_SUCCESS,
            count >= TASK_VM_INFO_REV1_COUNT
            else { return nil }
        
        let usedBytes = Float(info.phys_footprint)
        return usedBytes
    }
    
    class func formattedMemoryFootprint() -> String
    {
        let usedBytes: UInt64? = UInt64(self.memoryFootprint() ?? 0)
        let usedMB = Double(usedBytes ?? 0) / 1024 / 1024
        let usedMBAsString: String = "\(usedMB)MB"
        return usedMBAsString
     }
}

Enjoy!

Note: an enterprising coder may want to add a static formatter to the class so that usedMBAsString only returns 2 significant decimal places.

2
  • 1
    This should really be the accepted answer (as an example; only solution for NEPacketTunnelProvider extension).
    – Top-Master
    Oct 14, 2021 at 5:54
  • 1
    checkout this jianshu.com/p/e3161d4f3a62 work for me (这个是我试过唯一有效的, 有考虑 32 位 和 64 位设备) Apr 27, 2023 at 7:33
33

The headers forTASK_BASIC_INFO say:

/* Don't use this, use MACH_TASK_BASIC_INFO instead */

Here is a version using MACH_TASK_BASIC_INFO:

void report_memory(void)
{
    struct mach_task_basic_info info;
    mach_msg_type_number_t size = MACH_TASK_BASIC_INFO_COUNT;
    kern_return_t kerr = task_info(mach_task_self(),
                                   MACH_TASK_BASIC_INFO,
                                   (task_info_t)&info,
                                   &size);
    if( kerr == KERN_SUCCESS ) {
        NSLog(@"Memory in use (in bytes): %u", info.resident_size);
    } else {
        NSLog(@"Error with task_info(): %s", mach_error_string(kerr));
    }
}
8
  • Any idea why the value logged here is around twice bigger on a simulator than Xcode reports and three times on a real device?
    – Julian
    Oct 6, 2015 at 7:57
  • 1
    I don't know why the difference. That would make a good new question. Oct 6, 2015 at 16:47
  • 1
    I found the difference. It is because of resident memory not the live bytes
    – Julian
    Oct 6, 2015 at 17:16
  • can we get memory usage of other applications?? @combinatorial Dec 23, 2015 at 11:03
  • 1
    @VikasBansal no you can't. Dec 23, 2015 at 15:21
18

Here is report_memory() enhanced to rapidly show leak status in the NSLog().

void report_memory(void) {
    static unsigned last_resident_size=0;
    static unsigned greatest = 0;
    static unsigned last_greatest = 0;

    struct task_basic_info info;
    mach_msg_type_number_t size = sizeof(info);
    kern_return_t kerr = task_info(mach_task_self(),
                               TASK_BASIC_INFO,
                               (task_info_t)&info,
                               &size);
    if( kerr == KERN_SUCCESS ) {
        int diff = (int)info.resident_size - (int)last_resident_size;
        unsigned latest = info.resident_size;
        if( latest > greatest   )   greatest = latest;  // track greatest mem usage
        int greatest_diff = greatest - last_greatest;
        int latest_greatest_diff = latest - greatest;
        NSLog(@"Mem: %10u (%10d) : %10d :   greatest: %10u (%d)", info.resident_size, diff,
          latest_greatest_diff,
          greatest, greatest_diff  );
    } else {
        NSLog(@"Error with task_info(): %s", mach_error_string(kerr));
    }
    last_resident_size = info.resident_size;
    last_greatest = greatest;
}
1
  • 4
    size should be TASK_BASIC_INFO_COUNT instead of sizeof(info) - this mistake copy-pasted to many places with same code Dec 2, 2013 at 1:12
7

Swift solution of Jason Coco's answer:

func reportMemory() {
    let name = mach_task_self_
    let flavor = task_flavor_t(TASK_BASIC_INFO)
    let basicInfo = task_basic_info()
    var size: mach_msg_type_number_t = mach_msg_type_number_t(sizeofValue(basicInfo))
    let pointerOfBasicInfo = UnsafeMutablePointer<task_basic_info>.alloc(1)

    let kerr: kern_return_t = task_info(name, flavor, UnsafeMutablePointer(pointerOfBasicInfo), &size)
    let info = pointerOfBasicInfo.move()
    pointerOfBasicInfo.dealloc(1)

    if kerr == KERN_SUCCESS {
        print("Memory in use (in bytes): \(info.resident_size)")
    } else {
        print("error with task info(): \(mach_error_string(kerr))")
    }
}
1
  • what to do if we want to know how much ram some other applicaiton (skype) is using? Aug 6, 2015 at 10:17
4

Swift 3.1 (As of August 8, 2017)

func getMemory() {

    var taskInfo = mach_task_basic_info()
    var count = mach_msg_type_number_t(MemoryLayout<mach_task_basic_info>.size)/4
    let kerr: kern_return_t = withUnsafeMutablePointer(to: &taskInfo) {
        $0.withMemoryRebound(to: integer_t.self, capacity: 1) {
            task_info(mach_task_self_, task_flavor_t(MACH_TASK_BASIC_INFO), $0, &count)
        }
    }
    if kerr == KERN_SUCCESS {
        let usedMegabytes = taskInfo.resident_size/(1024*1024)
        print("used megabytes: \(usedMegabytes)")
    } else {
        print("Error with task_info(): " +
            (String(cString: mach_error_string(kerr), encoding: String.Encoding.ascii) ?? "unknown error"))
    }

}
4
  • 1
    The memory usage using this code shows x3 times the memory usage from the debugger. Why?
    – user3407174
    Apr 23, 2018 at 9:20
  • 1
    Well, I guess you need to divide by (1024*1024), not by 1000000, to get megabytes from bytes.
    – ivanzoid
    Mar 5, 2019 at 14:11
  • That doesn't make the difference of x3.
    – decades
    May 1, 2019 at 17:53
  • it gives a real memory value, as in Xcode debugger, thanks
    – tatiana_c
    Jan 2, 2020 at 15:40
2

Here's a Swift 3 Version:

func mach_task_self() -> task_t {
    return mach_task_self_
}

func getMegabytesUsed() -> Float? {
    var info = mach_task_basic_info()
    var count = mach_msg_type_number_t(MemoryLayout.size(ofValue: info) / MemoryLayout<integer_t>.size)
    let kerr = withUnsafeMutablePointer(to: &info) { infoPtr in
        return infoPtr.withMemoryRebound(to: integer_t.self, capacity: Int(count)) { (machPtr: UnsafeMutablePointer<integer_t>) in
            return task_info(
                mach_task_self(),
                task_flavor_t(MACH_TASK_BASIC_INFO),
                machPtr,
                &count
            )
        }
    }
    guard kerr == KERN_SUCCESS else {
        return nil
    }  
    return Float(info.resident_size) / (1024 * 1024)   
}
2
  • 2
    The memory usage using this code shows x3 times the memory usage from the debugger. Why?
    – user3407174
    Apr 23, 2018 at 9:20
  • even I have the same issue for me almost three times higher that what is showing in profile? Sep 14, 2018 at 6:54
1

Objective-C version:

size_t memoryFootprint()
{
    task_vm_info_data_t vmInfo;
    mach_msg_type_number_t count = TASK_VM_INFO_COUNT;
    kern_return_t result = task_info(mach_task_self(), TASK_VM_INFO, (task_info_t) &vmInfo, &count);
    if (result != KERN_SUCCESS)
        return 0;
    return static_cast<size_t>(vmInfo.phys_footprint);
}

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