My program has many works that need a lot of memory that I can't exactly know when I need to stop it, but in case there's very few memory left, I can force it stop using resources. So can I get how many remaining (in byte) memory that my program can use?
P/s: There's NO way to release the process memory. They need memory开发者_如何学JAVA, as much as possible, and that is how it works (and, no trash for collector, since old ones still be need).
Try something like:
Debug.MemoryInfo memoryInfo = new Debug.MemoryInfo();
Debug.getMemoryInfo(memoryInfo);
String memMessage = String.format("Memory: Pss=%.2f MB,
Private=%.2f MB, Shared=%.2f MB",
memoryInfo.getTotalPss() / 1000,
memoryInfo.getTotalPrivateDirty() / 1000,
memoryInfo.getTotalSharedDirty() / 1000);
You can read more at this blog: http://huenlil.pixnet.net/blog/post/26872625
http://www.javaspecialists.eu/archive/Issue029.html http://www.exampledepot.com/egs/java.lang/GetHeapSize.html
public static long getCurrentFreeMemoryBytes() {
long heapSize = Runtime.getRuntime().totalMemory();
long heapRemaining = Runtime.getRuntime().freeMemory();
long nativeUsage = Debug.getNativeHeapAllocatedSize();
return Runtime.getRuntime().maxMemory() - (heapSize - heapRemaining) - nativeUsage;
}
While not perfect it should do the trick for the most part.
Check out the tools that Android provides for memory tracking here.
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