Welcome to OStack Knowledge Sharing Community for programmer and developer-Open, Learning and Share
Welcome To Ask or Share your Answers For Others

Categories

0 votes
216 views
in Technique[技术] by (71.8m points)

java - When to Garbage Collect

I have a piece of code that load a very big image in memory. So it seemed like a reasonable thing to call

System.gc();

before loading the image. From what I can tell it works with no issues.

Yesterday i decided to use a pretty useful piece of software called FindBugs that scans your code and reports back issues that might cause bugs or generally not advised strategies. The problem is that this piece of code i mentioned gets reported. The description is this:

... forces garbage collection; extremely dubious except in benchmarking code

And it goes on to elaborate :

Code explicitly invokes garbage collection. Except for specific use in benchmarking, this is very dubious.

In the past, situations where people have explicitly invoked the garbage collector in routines such as close or finalize methods has led to huge performance black holes. Garbage collection can be expensive. Any situation that forces hundreds or thousands of garbage collections will bring the machine to a crawl.

So my question is : Is it NOT OK to programmatically call the garbage collector in such a case? My code only calls it once and the method that it is in gets used rarely. And if it is not OK to call it then what should you do in a case where you need as much memory as possible before doing a very memory intensive operation and you need to free as much memory as posible prior to it?

See Question&Answers more detail:os

与恶龙缠斗过久,自身亦成为恶龙;凝视深渊过久,深渊将回以凝视…
Welcome To Ask or Share your Answers For Others

1 Answer

0 votes
by (71.8m points)

Typically the GC is smarter than you, so it's better to let it run whenever the runtime decides. If the runtime needs memory, it'll run the GC itself


与恶龙缠斗过久,自身亦成为恶龙;凝视深渊过久,深渊将回以凝视…
Welcome to OStack Knowledge Sharing Community for programmer and developer-Open, Learning and Share
Click Here to Ask a Question

...