blob: fc4f4bedd511332b60ce50ca838e83b666e25500 [file] [log] [blame]
Scott Maina3f0e012013-09-19 17:45:40 -07001page.title=Investigating Your RAM Usage
Joe Fernandez33baa5a2013-11-14 11:41:19 -08002page.tags=memory,OutOfMemoryError
Scott Maina3f0e012013-09-19 17:45:40 -07003@jd:body
4
5 <div id="qv-wrapper">
6 <div id="qv">
7 <h2>In this document</h2>
8<ol>
9 <li><a href="#LogMessages">Interpreting Log Messages</a></li>
10 <li><a href="#ViewHeap">Viewing Heap Updates</a></li>
11 <li><a href="#TrackAllocations">Tracking Allocations</a></li>
12 <li><a href="#ViewingAllocations">Viewing Overall Memory Allocations</a></li>
13 <li><a href="#HeapDump">Capturing a Heap Dump</a></li>
14 <li><a href="#TriggerLeaks">Triggering Memory Leaks</a></li>
15</ol>
16 <h2>See Also</h2>
17 <ul>
18 <li><a href="{@docRoot}training/articles/memory.html">Managing Your App's Memory</a></li>
19 </ul>
20 </div>
21 </div>
22
23
24
25
26<p>Because Android is designed for mobile devices, you should always be careful about how much
Rich Slogarf6d03e52015-07-07 11:40:47 -070027random-access memory (RAM) your app uses. Although Dalvik and ART perform
28routine garbage collection (GC), this doesn’t mean you can ignore when and where your app allocates and
Scott Maina3f0e012013-09-19 17:45:40 -070029releases memory. In order to provide a stable user experience that allows the system to quickly
Rich Slogarf6d03e52015-07-07 11:40:47 -070030switch between apps, it is important that your app does not needlessly consume memory when the user
Scott Maina3f0e012013-09-19 17:45:40 -070031is not interacting with it.</p>
32
33<p>Even if you follow all the best practices for <a href="{@docRoot}training/articles/memory.html"
34>Managing Your App Memory</a> during
35development (which you should), you still might leak objects or introduce other memory bugs. The
Rich Slogarf6d03e52015-07-07 11:40:47 -070036only way to be certain your app is using as little memory as possible is to analyze your app’s
Scott Maina3f0e012013-09-19 17:45:40 -070037memory usage with tools. This guide shows you how to do that.</p>
38
39
40<h2 id="LogMessages">Interpreting Log Messages</h2>
41
Rich Slogarf6d03e52015-07-07 11:40:47 -070042<p>The simplest place to begin investigating your app’s memory usage is the runtime log messages.
Mathieu Chartierd92c6bde2015-03-23 15:58:11 -070043Sometimes when a GC occurs, a message is printed to
44<a href="{@docRoot}tools/help/logcat.html">logcat</a>. The logcat output is also available in the
45Device Monitor or directly in IDEs such as Eclipse and Android Studio.</p>
Scott Maina3f0e012013-09-19 17:45:40 -070046
Mathieu Chartierd92c6bde2015-03-23 15:58:11 -070047<h3 id="DalvikLogMessages">Dalvik Log Messages</h3>
48
49<p>In Dalvik (but not ART), every GC prints the following information to logcat:</p>
Scott Maina3f0e012013-09-19 17:45:40 -070050
51<pre class="no-pretty-print">
52D/dalvikvm: &lt;GC_Reason> &lt;Amount_freed>, &lt;Heap_stats>, &lt;External_memory_stats>, &lt;Pause_time>
53</pre>
54
Mathieu Chartierd92c6bde2015-03-23 15:58:11 -070055<p>Example:</p>
56
57<pre class="no-pretty-print">
58D/dalvikvm( 9050): GC_CONCURRENT freed 2049K, 65% free 3571K/9991K, external 4703K/5261K, paused 2ms+2ms
59</pre>
60
Scott Maina3f0e012013-09-19 17:45:40 -070061<dl>
62<dt>GC Reason</dt>
63<dd>
Mathieu Chartierd92c6bde2015-03-23 15:58:11 -070064What triggered the GC and what kind of collection it is. Reasons that may appear
Scott Maina3f0e012013-09-19 17:45:40 -070065include:
66<dl>
67<dt><code>GC_CONCURRENT</code></dt>
Mathieu Chartierd92c6bde2015-03-23 15:58:11 -070068<dd>A concurrent GC that frees up memory as your heap begins to fill up.</dd>
Scott Maina3f0e012013-09-19 17:45:40 -070069
70<dt><code>GC_FOR_MALLOC</code></dt>
Rich Slogarf6d03e52015-07-07 11:40:47 -070071<dd>A GC caused because your app attempted to allocate memory when your heap was
72already full, so the system had to stop your app and reclaim memory.</dd>
Scott Maina3f0e012013-09-19 17:45:40 -070073
74<dt><code>GC_HPROF_DUMP_HEAP</code></dt>
Mathieu Chartierd92c6bde2015-03-23 15:58:11 -070075<dd>A GC that occurs when you request to create an HPROF file to analyze your heap.</dd>
Scott Maina3f0e012013-09-19 17:45:40 -070076
77<dt><code>GC_EXPLICIT</code>
Mathieu Chartierd92c6bde2015-03-23 15:58:11 -070078<dd>An explicit GC, such as when you call {@link java.lang.System#gc()} (which you
79should avoid calling and instead trust the GC to run when needed).</dd>
Scott Maina3f0e012013-09-19 17:45:40 -070080
81<dt><code>GC_EXTERNAL_ALLOC</code></dt>
82<dd>This happens only on API level 10 and lower (newer versions allocate everything in the Dalvik
Mathieu Chartierd92c6bde2015-03-23 15:58:11 -070083heap). A GC for externally allocated memory (such as the pixel data stored in
Scott Maina3f0e012013-09-19 17:45:40 -070084native memory or NIO byte buffers).</dd>
85</dl>
86</dd>
87
88<dt>Amount freed</dt>
Mathieu Chartierd92c6bde2015-03-23 15:58:11 -070089<dd>The amount of memory reclaimed from this GC.</dd>
Scott Maina3f0e012013-09-19 17:45:40 -070090
91<dt>Heap stats</dt>
Mathieu Chartierd92c6bde2015-03-23 15:58:11 -070092<dd>Percentage free of the heap and (number of live objects)/(total heap size).</dd>
Scott Maina3f0e012013-09-19 17:45:40 -070093
94<dt>External memory stats</dt>
95<dd>Externally allocated memory on API level 10 and lower (amount of allocated memory) / (limit at
96which collection will occur).</dd>
97
98<dt>Pause time</dt>
99<dd>Larger heaps will have larger pause times. Concurrent pause times show two pauses: one at the
100beginning of the collection and another near the end.</dd>
101</dl>
102
Mathieu Chartierd92c6bde2015-03-23 15:58:11 -0700103<p>As these log messages accumulate, look out for increases in the heap stats (the
104{@code 3571K/9991K} value in the above example). If this value continues to increase, you may have
105a memory leak.</p>
106
107
108<h3 id="ARTLogMessages">ART Log Messages</h3>
109
Rich Slogarf6d03e52015-07-07 11:40:47 -0700110<p>Unlike Dalvik, ART doesn't log messqages for GCs that were not explicitly requested. GCs are only
Mathieu Chartierd92c6bde2015-03-23 15:58:11 -0700111printed when they are they are deemed slow. More precisely, if the GC pause exceeds than 5ms or
Rich Slogarf6d03e52015-07-07 11:40:47 -0700112the GC duration exceeds 100ms. If the app is not in a pause perceptible process state,
Mathieu Chartierd92c6bde2015-03-23 15:58:11 -0700113then none of its GCs are deemed slow. Explicit GCs are always logged.</p>
114
115<p>ART includes the following information in its garbage collection log messages:</p>
Scott Maina3f0e012013-09-19 17:45:40 -0700116
117<pre class="no-pretty-print">
Mathieu Chartierd92c6bde2015-03-23 15:58:11 -0700118I/art: &lt;GC_Reason> &lt;GC_Name> &lt;Objects_freed>(&lt;Size_freed>) AllocSpace Objects, &lt;Large_objects_freed>(&lt;Large_object_size_freed>) &lt;Heap_stats> LOS objects, &lt;Pause_time(s)>
Scott Maina3f0e012013-09-19 17:45:40 -0700119</pre>
120
Mathieu Chartierd92c6bde2015-03-23 15:58:11 -0700121<p>Example:</p>
Scott Maina3f0e012013-09-19 17:45:40 -0700122
Mathieu Chartierd92c6bde2015-03-23 15:58:11 -0700123<pre class="no-pretty-print">
124I/art : Explicit concurrent mark sweep GC freed 104710(7MB) AllocSpace objects, 21(416KB) LOS objects, 33% free, 25MB/38MB, paused 1.230ms total 67.216ms
125</pre>
126
127<dl>
128<dt>GC Reason</dt>
129<dd>
130What triggered the GC and what kind of collection it is. Reasons that may appear
131include:
132<dl>
133<dt><code>Concurrent</code></dt>
Rich Slogarf6d03e52015-07-07 11:40:47 -0700134<dd>A concurrent GC which does not suspend app threads. This GC runs in a background thread
Mathieu Chartierd92c6bde2015-03-23 15:58:11 -0700135and does not prevent allocations.</dd>
136
137<dt><code>Alloc</code></dt>
Rich Slogarf6d03e52015-07-07 11:40:47 -0700138<dd>The GC was initiated because your app attempted to allocate memory when your heap
Mathieu Chartierd92c6bde2015-03-23 15:58:11 -0700139was already full. In this case, the garbage collection occurred in the allocating thread.</dd>
140
141<dt><code>Explicit</code>
Rich Slogarf6d03e52015-07-07 11:40:47 -0700142<dd>The garbage collection was explicitly requested by an app, for instance, by
Mathieu Chartierd92c6bde2015-03-23 15:58:11 -0700143calling {@link java.lang.System#gc()} or {@link java.lang.Runtime#gc()}. As with Dalvik, in ART it is
144recommended that you trust the GC and avoid requesting explicit GCs if possible. Explicit GCs are
145discouraged since they block the allocating thread and unnecessarily was CPU cycles. Explicit GCs
146could also cause jank if they cause other threads to get preempted.</dd>
147
148<dt><code>NativeAlloc</code></dt>
149<dd>The collection was caused by native memory pressure from native allocations such as Bitmaps or
150RenderScript allocation objects.</dd>
151
152<dt><code>CollectorTransition</code></dt>
153<dd>The collection was caused by a heap transition; this is caused by switching the GC at run time.
154Collector transitions consist of copying all the objects from a free-list backed
155space to a bump pointer space (or visa versa). Currently collector transitions only occur when an
Rich Slogarf6d03e52015-07-07 11:40:47 -0700156app changes process states from a pause perceptible state to a non pause perceptible state
Mathieu Chartierd92c6bde2015-03-23 15:58:11 -0700157(or visa versa) on low RAM devices.
158</dd>
159
160<dt><code>HomogeneousSpaceCompact</code></dt>
161<dd>Homogeneous space compaction is free-list space to free-list space compaction which usually
Rich Slogarf6d03e52015-07-07 11:40:47 -0700162occurs when an app is moved to a pause imperceptible process state. The main reasons for doing
Mathieu Chartierd92c6bde2015-03-23 15:58:11 -0700163this are reducing RAM usage and defragmenting the heap.
164</dd>
165
166<dt><code>DisableMovingGc</code></dt>
167<dd>This is not a real GC reason, but a note that collection was blocked due to use of
168GetPrimitiveArrayCritical. while concurrent heap compaction is occuring. In general, the use of
169GetPrimitiveArrayCritical is strongly discouraged due to its restrictions on moving collectors.
170</dd>
171
172<dt><code>HeapTrim</code></dt>
173<dd>This is not a GC reason, but a note that collection was blocked until a heap trim finished.
174</dd>
175
176</dl>
177</dd>
178
179
180<dl>
181<dt>GC Name</dt>
182<dd>
183ART has various different GCs which can get run.
184<dl>
185<dt><code>Concurrent mark sweep (CMS)</code></dt>
186<dd>A whole heap collector which frees collects all spaces other than the image space.</dd>
187
188<dt><code>Concurrent partial mark sweep</code></dt>
189<dd>A mostly whole heap collector which collects all spaces other than the image and zygote spaces.
190</dd>
191
192<dt><code>Concurrent sticky mark sweep</code></dt>
193<dd>A generational collector which can only free objects allocated since the last GC. This garbage
194collection is run more often than a full or partial mark sweep since it is faster and has lower pauses.
195</dd>
196
197<dt><code>Marksweep + semispace</code></dt>
198<dd>A non concurrent, copying GC used for heap transitions as well as homogeneous space
199compaction (to defragement the heap).</dd>
200
201</dl>
202</dd>
203
204<dt>Objects freed</dt>
205<dd>The number of objects which were reclaimed from this GC from the non large
206object space.</dd>
207
208<dt>Size freed</dt>
209<dd>The number of bytes which were reclaimed from this GC from the non large object
210space.</dd>
211
212<dt>Large objects freed</dt>
213<dd>The number of object in the large object space which were reclaimed from this garbage
214collection.</dd>
215
216<dt>Large object size freed</dt>
217<dd>The number of bytes in the large object space which were reclaimed from this garbage
218collection.</dd>
219
220<dt>Heap stats</dt>
221<dd>Percentage free and (number of live objects)/(total heap size).</dd>
222
223<dt>Pause times</dt>
224<dd>In general pause times are proportional to the number of object references which were modified
225while the GC was running. Currently, the ART CMS GCs only has one pause, near the end of the GC.
226The moving GCs have a long pause which lasts for the majority of the GC duration.</dd>
227</dl>
228
229<p>If you are seeing a large amount of GCs in logcat, look for increases in the heap stats (the
230{@code 25MB/38MB} value in the above example). If this value continues to increase and doesn't
231ever seem to get smaller, you could have a memory leak. Alternatively, if you are seeing GC which
232are for the reason "Alloc", then you are already operating near your heap capacity and can expect
Rich Slogarf6d03e52015-07-07 11:40:47 -0700233OOM exceptions in the near future. </p>
Scott Maina3f0e012013-09-19 17:45:40 -0700234
235<h2 id="ViewHeap">Viewing Heap Updates</h2>
236
Rich Slogarf6d03e52015-07-07 11:40:47 -0700237<p>To get a little information about what kind of memory your app is using and when, you
238can view real-time updates to your app's heap in Android Studio's
239<a href="{@docRoot}tools/studio/index.html#heap-dump">HPROF viewer</a> or in the Device Monitor:</p>
Scott Maina3f0e012013-09-19 17:45:40 -0700240
Rich Slogarf6d03e52015-07-07 11:40:47 -0700241<h3>Memory Monitor in Android Studio</h3>
242<p>Use Android Studio to view your app's memory use: </p>
243<ul>
244 <li>Start your app on a connected device or emulator.</li>
245 <li>Open the Android run-time window, and view the free and allocated memory in the Memory
246 Monitor. </li>
247 <li>Click the Dump Java Heap icon
248 (<img src="{@docRoot}images/tools/studio-dump-heap-icon.png" style="vertical-align:bottom;margin:0;height:21px"/>)
249 in the Memory Monitor toolbar.
250 <p>Android Studio creates the heap snapshot file with the filename
251 <code>Snapshot-yyyy.mm.dd-hh.mm.ss.hprof</code> in the <em>Captures</em> tab. </p>
252 </li>
253 <li>Double-click the heap snapshot file to open the HPROF viewer.
254 <p class="note"><strong>Note:</strong> To convert a heap dump to standard HPROF format in
255 Android Studio, right-click a heap snapshot in the <em>Captures</em> view and select
256 <strong>Export to standard .hprof</strong>.</p> </li>
257 <li>Interact with your app and click the
258 (<img src="{@docRoot}images/tools/studio-garbage-collect.png" style="vertical-align:bottom;margin:0;height:17px"/>)
259 icon to cause heap allocation.
260 </li>
261 <li>Identify which actions in your app are likely causing too much allocation and determine where
262 in your app you should try to reduce allocations and release resources.
263</ul>
264
265<h3>Device Monitor </h3>
Scott Maina3f0e012013-09-19 17:45:40 -0700266<ol>
267<li>Open the Device Monitor.
268<p>From your <code>&lt;sdk>/tools/</code> directory, launch the <code>monitor</code> tool.</p>
269</li>
270<li>In the Debug Monitor window, select your app's process from the list on the left.</li>
271<li>Click <strong>Update Heap</strong> above the process list.</li>
272<li>In the right-side panel, select the <strong>Heap</strong> tab.</li>
273</ol>
274
275<p>The Heap view shows some basic stats about your heap memory usage, updated after every
Mathieu Chartierd92c6bde2015-03-23 15:58:11 -0700276GC. To see the first update, click the <strong>Cause GC</strong> button.</p>
Scott Maina3f0e012013-09-19 17:45:40 -0700277
278<img src="{@docRoot}images/tools/monitor-vmheap@2x.png" width="760" alt="" />
279<p class="img-caption"><strong>Figure 1.</strong> The Device Monitor tool,
280showing the <strong>[1] Update Heap</strong> and <strong>[2] Cause GC</strong> buttons.
281The Heap tab on the right shows the heap results.</p>
282
Rich Slogarf6d03e52015-07-07 11:40:47 -0700283
284<p>Continue interacting with your app to watch your heap allocation update with each garbage
285collection. This can help you identify which actions in your app are likely causing too much
Scott Maina3f0e012013-09-19 17:45:40 -0700286allocation and where you should try to reduce allocations and release
287resources.</p>
288
289
290
291<h2 id="TrackAllocations">Tracking Allocations</h2>
292
293<p>As you start narrowing down memory issues, you should also use the Allocation Tracker to
294get a better understanding of where your memory-hogging objects are allocated. The Allocation
295Tracker can be useful not only for looking at specific uses of memory, but also to analyze critical
Rich Slogarf6d03e52015-07-07 11:40:47 -0700296code paths in an app such as scrolling.</p>
Scott Maina3f0e012013-09-19 17:45:40 -0700297
Rich Slogarf6d03e52015-07-07 11:40:47 -0700298<p>For example, tracking allocations when flinging a list in your app allows you to see all the
Scott Maina3f0e012013-09-19 17:45:40 -0700299allocations that need to be done for that behavior, what thread they are on, and where they came
300from. This is extremely valuable for tightening up these paths to reduce the work they need and
301improve the overall smoothness of the UI.</p>
302
Rich Slogare5fe2462015-07-07 12:17:02 -0700303<p>To use the Allocation Tracker, open the Memory Monitor in Android Studio and click the
304<a href="{@docRoot}tools/studio/index.html#alloc-tracker" style="vertical-align:bottom;margin:0;height:21px">
305Allocation Tracker</a> icon. You can also track allocations in the Android Device Monitor:</p>
306
307
308<h3>Android Studio </h3>
309<p>To use the <a href="{@docRoot}tools/studio/index.html#alloc-tracker">Allocation Tracker</a> in
310Android Studio: </p>
311
312<ol>
313 <li>Start your app on a connected device or emulator</li>
314 <li>Open the Android run-tme window, and view the free and allocated memory in the Memory
315 Monitor. </li>
316 <li>Click the Allocation Tracker icon
317 (<img src="{@docRoot}images/tools/studio-allocation-tracker-icon.png" style="vertical-align:bottom;margin:0;height:21px"/>) in the Memory Monitor tool bar to start and stop memory
318 allocations.
319 <p>Android Studio creates the allocation file with the filename
320 <code>Allocations-yyyy.mm.dd-hh.mm.ss.alloc</code> in the <em>Captures</em> tab. </p>
321 </li>
322 <li>Double-click the allocation file to open the Allocation viewer. </li>
323 <li>Identify which actions in your app are likely causing too much allocation and determine where
324 in your app you should try to reduce allocations and release resources.
325</ol>
326
327
328
329<h3>Device Monitor</h3>
Scott Maina3f0e012013-09-19 17:45:40 -0700330<ol>
331<li>Open the Device Monitor.
332<p>From your <code>&lt;sdk>/tools/</code> directory, launch the <code>monitor</code> tool.</p>
333</li>
334<li>In the DDMS window, select your app's process in the left-side panel.</li>
335<li>In the right-side panel, select the <strong>Allocation Tracker</strong> tab.</li>
336<li>Click <strong>Start Tracking</strong>.</li>
Rich Slogarf6d03e52015-07-07 11:40:47 -0700337<li>Interact with your app to execute the code paths you want to analyze.</li>
Scott Maina3f0e012013-09-19 17:45:40 -0700338<li>Click <strong>Get Allocations</strong> every time you want to update the
339list of allocations.</li>
340 </ol>
341
342<p>The list shows all recent allocations,
343currently limited by a 512-entry ring buffer. Click on a line to see the stack trace that led to
344the allocation. The trace shows you not only what type of object was allocated, but also in which
345thread, in which class, in which file and at which line.</p>
346
347<img src="{@docRoot}images/tools/monitor-tracker@2x.png" width="760" alt="" />
348<p class="img-caption"><strong>Figure 2.</strong> The Device Monitor tool,
Rich Slogarf6d03e52015-07-07 11:40:47 -0700349showing recent app allocations and stack traces in the Allocation Tracker.</p>
Scott Maina3f0e012013-09-19 17:45:40 -0700350
351
352<p class="note"><strong>Note:</strong> You will always see some allocations from {@code
353DdmVmInternal} and else where that come from the allocation tracker itself.</p>
354
355<p>Although it's not necessary (nor possible) to remove all allocations for your performance
356critical code paths, the allocation tracker can help you identify important issues in your code.
357For instance, some apps might create a new {@link android.graphics.Paint} object on every draw.
358Moving that object into a global member is a simple fix that helps improve performance.</p>
359
360
361
362
363
364
365<h2 id="ViewingAllocations">Viewing Overall Memory Allocations</h2>
366
Scott Main4c6b1af2013-11-11 17:33:32 -0800367<p>For further analysis, you may want to observe how your app's memory is
368divided between different types of RAM allocation with the
369following <a href="{@docRoot}tools/help/adb.html">adb</a> command:</p>
Scott Maina3f0e012013-09-19 17:45:40 -0700370
Scott Main4c6b1af2013-11-11 17:33:32 -0800371<pre class="no-pretty-print">
Mathieu Chartierd92c6bde2015-03-23 15:58:11 -0700372adb shell dumpsys meminfo &lt;package_name|pid> [-d]
Scott Main4c6b1af2013-11-11 17:33:32 -0800373</pre>
374
Mathieu Chartierd92c6bde2015-03-23 15:58:11 -0700375<p>The -d flag prints more info related to Dalvik and ART memory usage.</p>
376
Scott Main4c6b1af2013-11-11 17:33:32 -0800377<p>The output lists all of your app's current allocations, measured in kilobytes.</p>
378
379<p>When inspecting this information, you should be familiar with the
380following types of allocation:</p>
Scott Maina3f0e012013-09-19 17:45:40 -0700381
382<dl>
383<dt>Private (Clean and Dirty) RAM</dt>
384<dd>This is memory that is being used by only your process. This is the bulk of the RAM that the system
385can reclaim when your app’s process is destroyed. Generally, the most important portion of this is
386“private dirty” RAM, which is the most expensive because it is used by only your process and its
387contents exist only in RAM so can’t be paged to storage (because Android does not use swap). All
388Dalvik and native heap allocations you make will be private dirty RAM; Dalvik and native
389allocations you share with the Zygote process are shared dirty RAM.</dd>
390
391<dt>Proportional Set Size (PSS)</dt>
392<dd>This is a measurement of your app’s RAM use that takes into account sharing pages across processes.
393Any RAM pages that are unique to your process directly contribute to its PSS value, while pages
394that are shared with other processes contribute to the PSS value only in proportion to the amount
395of sharing. For example, a page that is shared between two processes will contribute half of its
396size to the PSS of each process.</dd>
397</dl>
398
399
400<p>A nice characteristic of the PSS measurement is that you can add up the PSS across all processes to
401determine the actual memory being used by all processes. This means PSS is a good measure for the
402actual RAM weight of a process and for comparison against the RAM use of other processes and the
403total available RAM.</p>
404
Scott Maina3f0e012013-09-19 17:45:40 -0700405
Mathieu Chartierd92c6bde2015-03-23 15:58:11 -0700406<p>For example, below is the the output for Map’s process on a Nexus 5 device. There is a lot of
Scott Main4c6b1af2013-11-11 17:33:32 -0800407information here, but key points for discussion are listed below.</p>
Mathieu Chartierd92c6bde2015-03-23 15:58:11 -0700408<code>adb shell dumpsys meminfo com.google.android.apps.maps -d</code>
Scott Maina3f0e012013-09-19 17:45:40 -0700409
410<p class="note"><strong>Note:</strong> The information you see may vary slightly from what is shown
411here, as some details of the output differ across platform versions.</p>
412
413<pre class="no-pretty-print">
Mathieu Chartierd92c6bde2015-03-23 15:58:11 -0700414** MEMINFO in pid 18227 [com.google.android.apps.maps] **
415 Pss Private Private Swapped Heap Heap Heap
416 Total Dirty Clean Dirty Size Alloc Free
417 ------ ------ ------ ------ ------ ------ ------
418 Native Heap 10468 10408 0 0 20480 14462 6017
419 Dalvik Heap 34340 33816 0 0 62436 53883 8553
420 Dalvik Other 972 972 0 0
421 Stack 1144 1144 0 0
422 Gfx dev 35300 35300 0 0
423 Other dev 5 0 4 0
424 .so mmap 1943 504 188 0
425 .apk mmap 598 0 136 0
426 .ttf mmap 134 0 68 0
427 .dex mmap 3908 0 3904 0
428 .oat mmap 1344 0 56 0
429 .art mmap 2037 1784 28 0
430 Other mmap 30 4 0 0
431 EGL mtrack 73072 73072 0 0
432 GL mtrack 51044 51044 0 0
433 Unknown 185 184 0 0
434 TOTAL 216524 208232 4384 0 82916 68345 14570
435
436 Dalvik Details
437 .Heap 6568 6568 0 0
438 .LOS 24771 24404 0 0
439 .GC 500 500 0 0
440 .JITCache 428 428 0 0
441 .Zygote 1093 936 0 0
442 .NonMoving 1908 1908 0 0
443 .IndirectRef 44 44 0 0
444
445 Objects
446 Views: 90 ViewRootImpl: 1
447 AppContexts: 4 Activities: 1
448 Assets: 2 AssetManagers: 2
449 Local Binders: 21 Proxy Binders: 28
450 Parcel memory: 18 Parcel count: 74
451 Death Recipients: 2 OpenSSL Sockets: 2
452</pre>
453
454<p>Here is an older dumpsys on Dalvik of the gmail app:</p>
455
456<pre class="no-pretty-print">
Scott Maina3f0e012013-09-19 17:45:40 -0700457** MEMINFO in pid 9953 [com.google.android.gm] **
458 Pss Pss Shared Private Shared Private Heap Heap Heap
459 Total Clean Dirty Dirty Clean Clean Size Alloc Free
460 ------ ------ ------ ------ ------ ------ ------ ------ ------
461 Native Heap 0 0 0 0 0 0 7800 7637(6) 126
462 Dalvik Heap 5110(3) 0 4136 4988(3) 0 0 9168 8958(6) 210
463 Dalvik Other 2850 0 2684 2772 0 0
464 Stack 36 0 8 36 0 0
465 Cursor 136 0 0 136 0 0
466 Ashmem 12 0 28 0 0 0
467 Other dev 380 0 24 376 0 4
468 .so mmap 5443(5) 1996 2584 2664(5) 5788 1996(5)
469 .apk mmap 235 32 0 0 1252 32
470 .ttf mmap 36 12 0 0 88 12
471 .dex mmap 3019(5) 2148 0 0 8936 2148(5)
472 Other mmap 107 0 8 8 324 68
473 Unknown 6994(4) 0 252 6992(4) 0 0
474 TOTAL 24358(1) 4188 9724 17972(2)16388 4260(2)16968 16595 336
Ricardo Cervera2102ac12014-10-21 10:12:08 -0700475
Scott Maina3f0e012013-09-19 17:45:40 -0700476 Objects
477 Views: 426 ViewRootImpl: 3(8)
478 AppContexts: 6(7) Activities: 2(7)
479 Assets: 2 AssetManagers: 2
480 Local Binders: 64 Proxy Binders: 34
481 Death Recipients: 0
482 OpenSSL Sockets: 1
Ricardo Cervera2102ac12014-10-21 10:12:08 -0700483
Scott Maina3f0e012013-09-19 17:45:40 -0700484 SQL
485 MEMORY_USED: 1739
486 PAGECACHE_OVERFLOW: 1164 MALLOC_SIZE: 62
487</pre>
488
489<p>Generally, you should be concerned with only the <code>Pss Total</code> and <code>Private Dirty</code>
490columns. In some cases, the <code>Private Clean</code> and <code>Heap Alloc</code> columns also offer
491interesting data. Here is some more information about the different memory allocations (the rows)
492you should observe:
493
494<dl>
495<dt><code>Dalvik Heap</code></dt>
496<dd>The RAM used by Dalvik allocations in your app. The <code>Pss Total</code> includes all Zygote
497allocations (weighted by their sharing across processes, as described in the PSS definition above).
498The <code>Private Dirty</code> number is the actual RAM committed to only your app’s heap, composed of
499your own allocations and any Zygote allocation pages that have been modified since forking your
500app’s process from Zygote.
501
502<p class="note"><strong>Note:</strong> On newer platform versions that have the <code>Dalvik
503Other</code> section, the <code>Pss Total</code> and <code>Private Dirty</code> numbers for Dalvik Heap do
Mathieu Chartierd92c6bde2015-03-23 15:58:11 -0700504not include Dalvik overhead such as the just-in-time compilation (JIT) and GC
Scott Maina3f0e012013-09-19 17:45:40 -0700505bookkeeping, whereas older versions list it all combined under <code>Dalvik</code>.</p>
506
507<p>The <code>Heap Alloc</code> is the amount of memory that the Dalvik and native heap allocators keep
508track of for your app. This value is larger than <code>Pss Total</code> and <code>Private Dirty</code>
509because your process was forked from Zygote and it includes allocations that your process shares
510with all the others.</p>
511</dd>
512
513<dt><code>.so mmap</code> and <code>.dex mmap</code></dt>
Rich Slogarf6d03e52015-07-07 11:40:47 -0700514<dd>The RAM being used for mapped <code>.so</code> (native) and <code>.dex</code> (Dalvik or ART)
Mathieu Chartierd92c6bde2015-03-23 15:58:11 -0700515code. The <code>Pss Total</code> number includes platform code shared across apps; the
516<code>Private Clean</code> is your app’s own code. Generally, the actual mapped size will be much
517larger—the RAM here is only what currently needs to be in RAM for code that has been executed by
518the app. However, the .so mmap has a large private dirty, which is due to fix-ups to the native
519code when it was loaded into its final address.
520</dd>
521
522<dt><code>.oat mmap</code></dt>
523<dd>This is the amount of RAM used by the code image which is based off of the preloaded classes
524which are commonly used by multiple apps. This image is shared across all apps and is unaffected
525by particular apps.
526</dd>
527
528<dt><code>.art mmap</code></dt>
529<dd>This is the amount of RAM used by the heap image which is based off of the preloaded classes
530which are commonly used by multiple apps. This image is shared across all apps and is unaffected
531by particular apps. Even though the ART image contains {@link java.lang.Object} instances, it does not
532count towards your heap size.
533</dd>
534
535<dt><code>.Heap</code> (only with -d flag)</dt>
536<dd>This is the amount of heap memory for your app. This excludes objects in the image and large
537object spaces, but includes the zygote space and non-moving space.
538</dd>
539
540<dt><code>.LOS</code> (only with -d flag)</dt>
541<dd>This is the amount of RAM used by the ART large object space. This includes zygote large
542objects. Large objects are all primitive array allocations larger than 12KB.
543</dd>
544
545<dt><code>.GC</code> (only with -d flag)</dt>
546<dd>This is the amount of internal GC accounting overhead for your app. There is not really any way
547to reduce this overhead.
548</dd>
549
550<dt><code>.JITCache</code> (only with -d flag)</dt>
551<dd>This is the amount of memory used by the JIT data and code caches. Typically, this is zero
552since all of the apps will be compiled at installed time.
553</dd>
554
555<dt><code>.Zygote</code> (only with -d flag)</dt>
556<dd>This is the amount of memory used by the zygote space. The zygote space is created during
557device startup and is never allocated into.
558</dd>
559
560<dt><code>.NonMoving</code> (only with -d flag)</dt>
561<dd>This is the amount of RAM used by the ART non-moving space. The non-moving space contains
562special non-movable objects such as fields and methods. You can reduce this section by using fewer
563fields and methods in your app.
564</dd>
565
566<dt><code>.IndirectRef</code> (only with -d flag)</dt>
567<dd>This is the amount of RAM used by the ART indirect reference tables. Usually this amount is
568small, but if it is too high, it may be possible to reduce it by reducing the number of local and
569global JNI references used.
Scott Maina3f0e012013-09-19 17:45:40 -0700570</dd>
571
572<dt><code>Unknown</code></dt>
573<dd>Any RAM pages that the system could not classify into one of the other more specific items.
574Currently, this contains mostly native allocations, which cannot be identified by the tool when
575collecting this data due to Address Space Layout Randomization (ASLR). As with the Dalvik heap, the
576<code>Pss Total</code> for Unknown takes into account sharing with Zygote, and <code>Private Dirty</code>
577is unknown RAM dedicated to only your app.
578</dd>
579
580<dt><code>TOTAL</code></dt>
581<dd>The total Proportional Set Size (PSS) RAM used by your process. This is the sum of all PSS fields
582above it. It indicates the overall memory weight of your process, which can be directly compared
583with other processes and the total available RAM.
584
585<p>The <code>Private Dirty</code> and <code>Private Clean</code> are the total allocations within your
586process, which are not shared with other processes. Together (especially <code>Private Dirty</code>),
587this is the amount of RAM that will be released back to the system when your process is destroyed.
588Dirty RAM is pages that have been modified and so must stay committed to RAM (because there is no
589swap); clean RAM is pages that have been mapped from a persistent file (such as code being
590executed) and so can be paged out if not used for a while.</p>
591
592</dd>
593
594<dt><code>ViewRootImpl</code></dt>
595<dd>The number of root views that are active in your process. Each root view is associated with a
596window, so this can help you identify memory leaks involving dialogs or other windows.
597</dd>
598
599<dt><code>AppContexts</code> and <code>Activities</code></dt>
Rich Slogarf6d03e52015-07-07 11:40:47 -0700600<dd>The number of app {@link android.content.Context} and {@link android.app.Activity} objects that
Scott Maina3f0e012013-09-19 17:45:40 -0700601currently live in your process. This can be useful to quickly identify leaked {@link
602android.app.Activity} objects that can’t be garbage collected due to static references on them,
603which is common. These objects often have a lot of other allocations associated with them and so
604are a good way to track large memory leaks.</dd>
605
606<p class="note"><strong>Note:</strong> A {@link android.view.View} or {@link
607android.graphics.drawable.Drawable} object also holds a reference to the {@link
608android.app.Activity} that it's from, so holding a {@link android.view.View} or {@link
Rich Slogarf6d03e52015-07-07 11:40:47 -0700609android.graphics.drawable.Drawable} object can also lead to your app leaking an {@link
Scott Maina3f0e012013-09-19 17:45:40 -0700610android.app.Activity}.</p>
611
612</dd>
613</dl>
614
615
616
617
618
619
620
621
622
623<h2 id="HeapDump">Capturing a Heap Dump</h2>
624
625<p>A heap dump is a snapshot of all the objects in your app's heap, stored in a binary format called
626HPROF. Your app's heap dump provides information about the overall state of your app's heap so you
627can track down problems you might have identified while viewing heap updates.</p>
628
Rich Slogarf6d03e52015-07-07 11:40:47 -0700629
630<p>To retrieve your heap dump from within Android Studio, use the
631<a href="{@docRoot}tools/studio/index.html#me-cpu">Memory Monitor</a> and
632<a href="{@docRoot}tools/studio/index.html#heap-dump">HPROF viewer</a>.
633
634<p>You can also still perform these procedures in the Android monitor:</p>
Scott Maina3f0e012013-09-19 17:45:40 -0700635<ol>
636<li>Open the Device Monitor.
637<p>From your <code>&lt;sdk>/tools/</code> directory, launch the <code>monitor</code> tool.</p>
638</li>
639<li>In the DDMS window, select your app's process in the left-side panel.</li>
640<li>Click <strong>Dump HPROF file</strong>, shown in figure 3.</li>
641<li>In the window that appears, name your HPROF file, select the save location,
642then click <strong>Save</strong>.</li>
643</ol>
644
645<img src="{@docRoot}images/tools/monitor-hprof@2x.png" width="760" alt="" />
646<p class="img-caption"><strong>Figure 3.</strong> The Device Monitor tool,
647showing the <strong>[1] Dump HPROF file</strong> button.</p>
648
649<p>If you need to be more precise about when the dump is created, you can also create a heap dump
Rich Slogarf6d03e52015-07-07 11:40:47 -0700650at the critical point in your app code by calling {@link android.os.Debug#dumpHprofData
Scott Maina3f0e012013-09-19 17:45:40 -0700651dumpHprofData()}.</p>
652
653<p>The heap dump is provided in a format that's similar to, but not identical to one from the Java
654HPROF tool. The major difference in an Android heap dump is due to the fact that there are a large
655number of allocations in the Zygote process. But because the Zygote allocations are shared across
Rich Slogarf6d03e52015-07-07 11:40:47 -0700656all app processes, they don’t matter very much to your own heap analysis.</p>
Scott Maina3f0e012013-09-19 17:45:40 -0700657
658<p>To analyze your heap dump, you can use a standard tool like jhat or the <a href=
659"http://www.eclipse.org/mat/downloads.php">Eclipse Memory Analyzer Tool</a> (MAT). However, first
660you'll need to convert the HPROF file from Android's format to the J2SE HPROF format. You can do
Ricardo Cervera2102ac12014-10-21 10:12:08 -0700661this using the <code>hprof-conv</code> tool provided in the <code>&lt;sdk&gt;/platform-tools/</code>
Scott Maina3f0e012013-09-19 17:45:40 -0700662directory. Simply run the <code>hprof-conv</code> command with two arguments: the original HPROF
663file and the location to write the converted HPROF file. For example:</p>
664
665<pre class="no-pretty-print">
666hprof-conv heap-original.hprof heap-converted.hprof
667</pre>
668
669<p class="note"><strong>Note:</strong> If you're using the version of DDMS that's integrated into
Rich Slogare5fe2462015-07-07 12:17:02 -0700670Eclipse, you do not need to perform the HPROF conversation—it performs the conversion by
Scott Maina3f0e012013-09-19 17:45:40 -0700671default.</p>
672
673<p>You can now load the converted file in MAT or another heap analysis tool that understands
674the J2SE HPROF format.</p>
675
676<p>When analyzing your heap, you should look for memory leaks caused by:</p>
677<ul>
678<li>Long-lived references to an Activity, Context, View, Drawable, and other objects that may hold a
679reference to the container Activity or Context.</li>
680<li>Non-static inner classes (such as a Runnable, which can hold the Activity instance).</li>
681<li>Caches that hold objects longer than necessary.</li>
682</ul>
683
684
685<h3 id="EclipseMat">Using the Eclipse Memory Analyzer Tool</h3>
686
687<p>The <a href=
688"http://www.eclipse.org/mat/downloads.php">Eclipse Memory Analyzer Tool</a> (MAT) is just one
689tool that you can use to analyze your heap dump. It's also quite powerful so most of its
690capabilities are beyond the scope of this document, but here are a few tips to get you started.
691
692<p>Once you open your converted HPROF file in MAT, you'll see a pie chart in the Overview,
693showing what your largest objects are. Below this chart, are links to couple of useful features:</p>
694
695<ul>
696 <li>The <strong>Histogram view</strong> shows a list of all classes and how many instances
697 there are of each.
698 <p>You might want to use this view to find extra instances of classes for which you know there
699 should be only a certain number. For example, a common source of leaks is additional instance of
700 your {@link android.app.Activity} class, for which you should usually have only one instance
701 at a time. To find a specific class instance, type the class name into the <em>&lt;Regex></em>
702 field at the top of the list.
703 <p>When you find a class with too many instances, right-click it and select
704 <strong>List objects</strong> &gt; <strong>with incoming references</strong>. In the list that
705 appears, you can determine where an instance is retained by right-clicking it and selecting
706 <strong>Path To GC Roots</strong> &gt; <strong>exclude weak references</strong>.</p>
707 </li>
708
709 <li>The <strong>Dominator tree</strong> shows a list of objects organized by the amount
710 of retained heap.
711 <p>What you should look for is anything that's retaining a portion of heap that's roughly
712 equivalent to the memory size you observed leaking from the <a href="#LogMessages">GC logs</a>,
713 <a href="#ViewHeap">heap updates</a>, or <a href="#TrackAllocations">allocation
714 tracker</a>.
715 <p>When you see something suspicious, right-click on the item and select
716 <strong>Path To GC Roots</strong> &gt; <strong>exclude weak references</strong>. This opens a
717 new tab that traces the references to that object which is causing the alleged leak.</p>
718
719 <p class="note"><strong>Note:</strong> Most apps will show an instance of
720 {@link android.content.res.Resources} near the top with a good chunk of heap, but this is
Rich Slogarf6d03e52015-07-07 11:40:47 -0700721 usually expected when your app uses lots of resources from your {@code res/} directory.</p>
Scott Maina3f0e012013-09-19 17:45:40 -0700722 </li>
723</ul>
724
725
726<img src="{@docRoot}images/tools/mat-histogram@2x.png" width="760" alt="" />
727<p class="img-caption"><strong>Figure 4.</strong> The Eclipse Memory Analyzer Tool (MAT),
728showing the Histogram view and a search for "MainActivity".</p>
729
730<p>For more information about MAT, watch the Google I/O 2011 presentation,
731<a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_CruQY55HOk">Memory management for Android apps</a>,
732which includes a walkthrough using MAT beginning at about <a href=
733"http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_CruQY55HOk&amp;feature=player_detailpage#t=1270">21:10</a>.
734Also refer to the <a href="http://wiki.eclipse.org/index.php/MemoryAnalyzer">Eclipse Memory
735Analyzer documentation</a>.</p>
736
737<h4 id="MatCompare">Comparing heap dumps</h4>
738
739<p>You may find it useful to compare your app's heap state at two different points in time in order
740to inspect the changes in memory allocation. To compare two heap dumps using MAT:</p>
741
742<ol>
743 <li>Create two HPROF files as described above, in <a href="#HeapDump">Capturing a Heap Dump</a>.
744 <li>Open the first HPROF file in MAT (<strong>File</strong> > <strong>Open Heap Dump</strong>).
745 <li>In the Navigation History view (if not visible, select <strong>Window</strong> >
746 <strong>Navigation History</strong>), right-click on <strong>Histogram</strong> and select
747 <strong>Add to Compare Basket</strong>.
748 <li>Open the second HPROF file and repeat steps 2 and 3.
749 <li>Switch to the <em>Compare Basket</em> view and click <strong>Compare the Results</strong>
750 (the red "!" icon in the top-right corner of the view).
751</ol>
752
753
754
755
756
757
758<h2 id="TriggerLeaks">Triggering Memory Leaks</h2>
759
Rich Slogarf6d03e52015-07-07 11:40:47 -0700760<p>While using the tools described above, you should aggressively stress your app code and try
761forcing memory leaks. One way to provoke memory leaks in your app is to let it
Scott Maina3f0e012013-09-19 17:45:40 -0700762run for a while before inspecting the heap. Leaks will trickle up to the top of the allocations in
Rich Slogarf6d03e52015-07-07 11:40:47 -0700763the heap. However, the smaller the leak, the longer you need to run the app in order to see it.</p>
Scott Maina3f0e012013-09-19 17:45:40 -0700764
765<p>You can also trigger a memory leak in one of the following ways:</p>
766<ol>
767<li>Rotate the device from portrait to landscape and back again multiple times while in different
Rich Slogarf6d03e52015-07-07 11:40:47 -0700768activity states. Rotating the device can often cause an app to leak an {@link android.app.Activity},
Scott Maina3f0e012013-09-19 17:45:40 -0700769{@link android.content.Context}, or {@link android.view.View} object because the system
Rich Slogarf6d03e52015-07-07 11:40:47 -0700770recreates the {@link android.app.Activity} and if your app holds a reference
Scott Maina3f0e012013-09-19 17:45:40 -0700771to one of those objects somewhere else, the system can't garbage collect it.</li>
Rich Slogarf6d03e52015-07-07 11:40:47 -0700772<li>Switch between your app and another app while in different activity states (navigate to
Scott Maina3f0e012013-09-19 17:45:40 -0700773the Home screen, then return to your app).</li>
774</ol>
775
776<p class="note"><strong>Tip:</strong> You can also perform the above steps by using the "monkey"
777test framework. For more information on running the monkey test framework, read the <a href=
778"{@docRoot}tools/help/monkeyrunner_concepts.html">monkeyrunner</a>
Joe Fernandez33baa5a2013-11-14 11:41:19 -0800779documentation.</p>