I have a java desktop application for searching files and it is usually reaching the default heap limit pretty soon. I wont have access to all the systems it will be installed in so I want to increase the JVM heap size in the application itself. Can anybody help me how can I do that programmatically in my application
Dear,
See this post about increase java heap size :
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/880855/increase-the-java-heap-size-permanently
Maybe also you could clean some part of your code to reduce memory usage.
Best Regards
There is no such standard API to do so.
I would suggest you use Java Web Start to invoke your application (can be used for local applications to in the latest Sun Java 6) as it allows you to specify values for this.
You can then have three or four links each pointing to exactly the same files but with "Tiny", "Medium", "Large", "Gigantic" heap sizes.
For desktop applications, I suggest providing a launcher which can then specify your desired memory size. In addition to configuration of your JVM, you can also provide an icon, file associations, etc.
See this SO question for deployment alternatives.
Setting -Xmx to one gig doesn't mean that the JVM will allocate that much memory upon start-up. The JVM will allocate only -Xms (plus overhead) until more heap space is needed. Do you need to protect your users from thrashing virtual memory or a failed memory allocation from the OS? If not, just set Xmx to a large value. Note that Windows 32bit JVMs will often ignore Xmx settings greater than 1.2Gig, so it's best to not request more than a gig or so to be safe.