Hallo Michael, MEM>that is good news. MEM>i did alot of the same kind of testing. MEM>i did "new Integer[1000000]" MEM>and i never ran out of heap. I did THAT one, too. I didn't run out of heap, too. But when using "new Integer(0)" instead, it crashes - mind you, it doesn't run out of heap, though. MEM>again, i want to look at what libraries your jdk is depending on. i MEM>may MEM>have to point my cheap finger at glibc. As I said, I'm using Debian potato, that is glibc 2.1.2, AFAIK. MbG, Ekkehard ---------------------------------------------------------------------- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
- heap space and performance Michael E. Moores
- RE: heap space and performance Edson Carlos Ericksson Richter
- Re: heap space and performance Peter Schuller
- RE: heap space and performance Michael E. Moores
- RE: heap space and performance Ekkehard Kraemer
- RE: heap space and performance Michael E. Moores
- RE: heap space and perform... Ekkehard Kraemer
- RE: heap space and performance Edson Carlos Ericksson Richter
- RE: heap space and performance Edson Carlos Ericksson Richter
- RE: heap space and performance Michael E. Moores
- RE: heap space and performance Edson Carlos Ericksson Richter
- RE: heap space and performance Michael E. Moores
- RE: heap space and performance Ekkehard Kraemer
- RE: heap space and performance Michael E. Moores
- Re: heap space and perform... Juergen Kreileder
- Re: heap space and pe... Michael E. Moores
- Re: heap space an... Juergen Kreileder