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https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/DERBY-3009?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:comment-tabpanel&focusedCommentId=12708918#action_12708918
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Nathan Boy commented on DERBY-3009:
-----------------------------------

I have this problem as well, in Derby 10.5.1.1 and 10.4.2.0.  I have a schema 
of about 16 tables, a few of which generally have 200-300k rows.  All of the 
data is loaded in, and then foreign key constraints are added one by one.  I 
tried committing between each ADD CONSTRAINT statement, but this did not seem 
to have any effect.  I still run out of memory even when heap size is set to 
2-3 gb.  I have not tried shutting down and starting up the database between 
each add constraint statement.  I will try this next.

> Out of memory error when creating a very large table
> ----------------------------------------------------
>
>                 Key: DERBY-3009
>                 URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/DERBY-3009
>             Project: Derby
>          Issue Type: Bug
>          Components: SQL
>    Affects Versions: 10.2.2.0
>         Environment: Win XP Pro
>            Reporter: Nick Williamson
>         Attachments: DERBY-3009.zip
>
>
> When creating an extremely large table (c.50 indexes, c.50 FK constraints), 
> IJ crashes with an out of memory error. The table can be created successfully 
> if it is done in stages, each one in a different IJ session.
> From Kristian Waagan:
> "With default settings on my machine, I also get the OOME.
> A brief investigation revealed a few things:
>   1) The OOME occurs during constraint additions (with ALTER TABLE ... 
> ADD CONSTRAINT). I could observe this by monitoring the heap usage.
>   2) The complete script can be run by increasing the heap size. I tried with 
> 256 MB, but the monitoring showed usage peaked at around 150 MB.
>   3) The stack traces produced when the OOME occurs varies (as could be 
> expected).
>   4) It is the Derby engine that "produce" the OOME, not ij (i.e. when I ran 
> with the network server, the server failed).
> I have not had time to examine the heap content, but I do believe there is a 
> bug in Derby. It seems some resource is not freed after use."

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