How do you Force Garbage Collection from the Shell?

So I am looking at a heap with jmap on a remote box and I want to force garbage collection on it. How do you do this without popping into jvisualvm or jconsole and friends?

I know you shouldn't be in the practice of forcing garbage collection -- you should just figure out why the heap is big/growing.

I also realize the System.GC() doesn't actually force garbage collection -- it just tells the GC that you'd like it to occur.

Having said that is there a way to do this easily? Some command line app I'm missing?


Since JDK 7 you can use the JDK command tool 'jcmd' such as:

jcmd <pid> GC.run


If you run jmap -histo:live <pid>, that will force a full GC on the heap before it prints anything out.


You can do this via the free jmxterm program.

Fire it up like so:

java -jar jmxterm-1.0-alpha-4-uber.jar

From there, you can connect to a host and trigger GC:

$>open host:jmxport
#Connection to host:jmxport is opened
$>bean java.lang:type=Memory
#bean is set to java.lang:type=Memory
$>run gc
#calling operation gc of mbean java.lang:type=Memory
#operation returns: 
null
$>quit
#bye

Look at the docs on the jmxterm web site for information about embedding this in bash/perl/ruby/other scripts. I've used popen2 in Python or open3 in Perl to do this.

UPDATE: here's a one-liner using jmxterm:

echo run -b java.lang:type=Memory gc | java -jar jmxterm-1.0-alpha-4-uber.jar -n -l host:port