JVM memory area related jargons are key to understand the JVM on the whole. In this article let us discuss about the important memory areas in JVM.
Heap MemoryClass instances and arrays are stored in heap memory. Heap memory is also called as shared memory. As this is the place where multiple threads will share the same data.
Non-heap Memory
It comprises of ‘Method Area’ and other memory required for internal processing. So here the major player is ‘Method Area’.
Method Area
As given in the last line, method area is part of non-heap memory. It stores per-class structures, code for methods and constructors. Per-class structure means runtime constants and static fields.
Memory Pool:
Memory pools are created by JVM memory managers during runtime. Memory pool may belong to either heap or non-heap memory.
Runtime Constant Pool:
A run time constant pool is a per-class or per-interface run time representation of the constant_pool table in a class file. Each runtime constant pool is allocated from the Java
Memory pools are created by JVM memory managers during runtime. Memory pool may belong to either heap or non-heap memory.
Runtime Constant Pool:
A run time constant pool is a per-class or per-interface run time representation of the constant_pool table in a class file. Each runtime constant pool is allocated from the Java
virtual machine’s method area.
Java Stacks or Frames:
Java stacks are created private to a thread. Every thread will have a program counter (PC) and a java stack. PC will use the java stack to store the intermediate values, dynamic linking, return values for methods and dispatch exceptions. This is used in the place of registers.
Memory Generations
HotSpot VM’s garbage collector uses generational garbage collection. It separates the JVM’s memory into and they are called young generation and old generation.
Java stacks are created private to a thread. Every thread will have a program counter (PC) and a java stack. PC will use the java stack to store the intermediate values, dynamic linking, return values for methods and dispatch exceptions. This is used in the place of registers.
Memory Generations
HotSpot VM’s garbage collector uses generational garbage collection. It separates the JVM’s memory into and they are called young generation and old generation.
Young Generation
Young generation memory consists of two parts, Eden space and survivor space. Shortlived objects will be available in Eden space. Every object starts its life from Eden space. When GC happens, if an object is still alive and it will be moved to survivor space and other dereferenced objects will be removed.
Old Generation – Tenured and PermGen
Old generation memory has two parts, tenured generation and permanent generation (PermGen). PermGen is a popular term. We used to error like PermGen space not sufficient.
GC moves live objects from survivor space to tenured generation. The permanent generation contains meta data of the virtual machine, class and method objects.
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