How do I set Java's min and max heap size through environment variables?
Solution 1:
You can't do it using environment variables directly. You need to use the set of "non standard" options that are passed to the java command. Run: java -X for details. The options you're looking for are -Xmx and -Xms (this is "initial" heap size, so probably what you're looking for.)
Some products like Ant or Tomcat might come with a batch script that looks for the JAVA_OPTS environment variable, but it's not part of the Java runtime. If you are using one of those products, you may be able to set the variable like:
set JAVA_OPTS="-Xms128m -Xmx256m"
You can also take this approach with your own command line like:
set JAVA_OPTS="-Xms128m -Xmx256m"
java ${JAVA_OPTS} MyClass
Solution 2:
If you want any java
process, not just ant or Tomcat, to pick up options like -Xmx
use the environment variable _JAVA_OPTIONS
.
In bash: export _JAVA_OPTIONS="-Xmx1g"
Solution 3:
Actually, there is a way to set global defaults for Sun's JVM via environment variables.
See How to set a java system property so that it is effective whenever I start JVM without adding it to the command line arguments.