I have a microservice like java framework. Many java processes run on a single box (ubuntu 14.04.4 LTS). The java processes use alot system memory, so the swap space is used heavily. The jstat gc reports do not explain the systems memory usage. All java processes run with the parameters
-XX:MinHeapFreeRatio=20 -XX:MaxHeapFreeRatio=40 -XX:GCTimeRatio=4 -XX:AdaptiveSizePolicyWeight=90
to force the JVM to give memory back to the system. Without the parameters the problem persists. Some java components use nashorn engine to script some functionality.
Can someone explain the behavior here?
Are there any jvm patameters that restrict the huge system memory usage?
How to command the OS to be more restrictive with memory allocation for the jvm?
Some data:
Component A (with nashorn)
top:
PID USER PR NI VIRT RES SHR S %CPU %MEM TIME+ COMMAND
2400 xxxxxx 20 0 13.933g 807496 7332 S 0.0 2.5 4180:15 java
jstat -gc 2400:
S0C S1C S0U S1U EC EU OC OU MC MU CCSC CCSU YGC YGCT FGC FGCT GCT
512.0 512.0 0.0 400.0 19456.0 12751.6 62464.0 59862.3 89688.0 84866.6 10624.0 9440.4 2165265 15977.896 16816 1813.836 17791.732
- capacity: ca. 180 MB
- usage: ca. 165 MB
- system resources: ca. 800 MB
Why does the component uses more the 4 times the GC areas memory?
Component B (without nashorn)
top:
PID USER PR NI VIRT RES SHR S %CPU %MEM TIME+ COMMAND
19476 xxxx 20 0 13.465g 120436 7836 S 7.0 0.4 22:40.76 java
jstat -gc 19476:
S0C S1C S0U S1U EC EU OC OU MC MU CCSC CCSU YGC YGCT FGC FGCT GCT
512.0 512.0 0.0 0.0 41472.0 25408.7 343040.0 7164.5 17664.0 17183.1 2048.0 1919.4 3650 10.806 939 16.788 27.594
- capacity: ca. 403 MB
- usage: ca. 52 MB
- system resources: 120 MB
Here the GC area capacities are bigger than the actual systems memory usage. Still the systems memory usage is twice the GC areas. IMO this component behaves normal because the libraries etc. are mapped partially into memory as well.
Component C (without nashorn)
top:
PID USER PR NI VIRT RES SHR S %CPU %MEM TIME+ COMMAND
2272 xxxxxx 20 0 13.382g 922944 11108 S 0.7 2.8 40033:41 java
jstat -gc 2272:
S0C S1C S0U S1U EC EU OC OU MC MU CCSC CCSU YGC YGCT FGC FGCT GCT
1024.0 1024.0 868.0 0.0 36352.0 23866.1 76800.0 56580.2 68864.0 64571.1 8448.0 7460.6 31974159 199295.501 844692 134644.040 333939.541
- capacity: ca. 190 MB
- usage: ca. 152 MB
- system resources: 920 MB
Why does the component uses more the 6 times the GC areas memory?
There is no single explanation for memory usage, there are many contributing factors.
pmap -x <pid>
to identify memory-mapped files.[anon]
mappings in pmap) or use Yourkit which has a memory inspection to identify the amount allocated by direct buffers. At runtime you can use BufferPoolMXBean to track direct buffer use.Beyond that, you have to take into account that each JVM comes with some baseline memory consumption and needed breathing room for the garbage collector. Running multiple services in a shared JVM can amortize those baseline costs.
Due to complexities of the virtual memory system you also need to be aware of the difference between used, committed, reserved and resident memory.
That would depend on the cause.
For the managed heap it's possible to make it yield unused memory back to the OS more swiftly, but comes with a performance penalty.