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Java Agent for Memory Measurements
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rajuyadav44/jamm
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Overview ======== Jamm provides MemoryMeter, a java agent to measure actual object memory use including JVM overhead. Building ======== "ant jar"; optionally, "ant test" Use === To use MemoryMeter, start the JVM with "-javaagent:<path to>/jamm.jar" You can then use MemoryMeter in your code like this: MemoryMeter meter = new MemoryMeter(); meter.measure(object); meter.measureDeep(object); meter.countChildren(object); The fine print ============== MemoryMeter is as accurate as java.lang.instrument.Instrumentation.getObjectSize, which only claims to provide "approximate" results, but in practice seems to work as expected. MemoryMeter uses reflection to crawl the object graph for measureDeep. Reflection is slow: measuring a one-million object Cassandra Memtable (that is, 1 million children from MemoryMeter.countChildren) took about 5 seconds wall clock time. By default, MemoryMeter keeps track of descendents visited by measureDeep with an IdentityHashMap. This prevents both overcounting and infinite loops due to cycles in the object graph. Of course, this tracking imposes a memory cost of its own. You can override this by passing a different tracker provider to the MemoryMeter constructor. Jamm provides AlwaysEmptySet, which allows add() calls but never remembers anything, as one alternative. (Obviously this will break painfully if there actually are cycles present!) A more useful alternative, but out of Jamm's scope, would be a tracker using a Bloom filter to implement a probabilistic set interface -- this would have the potential of _undercounting_ due to false positives, but it would guarantee not to loop over cycles.
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