A few days ago I began encountering a java.lang.OutOfMemoryError: Java heap space
exception on startup of MATLAB - before I run any piece of code or add anythin
Start your application using java -Xmx -Xms option
provide -
-Xmx <number> : max memory allocation to app
-Xms <number> : Min memory at startup
To set the -Xmx
parameter in more recent versions of Matlab, go to Preferences (on the toolbar/ribbon), then
MATLAB > General > Java Heap Memory
There is a slider there. Matlab will have to be restarted for this to take effect.
There is a warning, however:
Note: Increasing the Java heap size decreases the amount of memory available for storing data in arrays.
I guess this means that Matlab doesn't store arrays in its Java heap space. But does this matter if we are just setting the upper limit? I don't think so. More specifically, looking at what happens when I set the above slider to 36 GB, Matlab starts up and immediately its virtual memory (as seen with top
) goes to 39.9 GB. But physical memory use is only around 300 MB. So, unless it actually puts something in that heap space, there won't be less physical memory available to e.g. arrays. So it looks like this warning can be ignored.
In case you only have non-graphical access to Matlab through a terminal, the effect of the above command was to add the following line to ~/.matlab/R2016a/matlab.prf
, so you could do that manually instead.
JavaMemHeapMax=I36532
This line appeared after I used the slider to set the preference to 36,532 MB and quit Matlab. If you can't find your matlab.prf
file, check here.
Refer this How do I increase the heap space for the Java VM in MATLAB 6.0 (R12) and later versions?
EDIT
-Xms
sets the initial size of the heap. Changing this will have no effect on java.lang.OutOfMemory
errors. The option to use is -Xmx
which sets the maximum size of the heap. See here for details.