The android framework enforces a per-process 24 MB memory limit. On some older devices, such as the G1, the limit is even lower at 16 Mb.
What's more, the memory used by bitmaps is stored in the limit. For an application manipulating images it is pretty easy to reach this limit and get the process killed with an OOM exception:
E/dalvikvm-heap (12517): 1048576-byte external allocation too large for this process.
E/graphicsjni (12517): VM won't let us allocate 1048576 bytes
D/androidruntime (12517): Shutting Down VM
W/dalvikvm (12517): threadid = 1: thread exiting with uncaught exception (group = 0x4001d7f0)
E/androidruntime (12517): Fatal exception: Main
E/androidruntime (12517): Java. Lang. outofmemoryerror: bitmap size exceeds VM budget
This limit is ridiculously low. for a device, like the Nexus One, with 512 MB of physical Ram, setting the per-process memory limit for the foreground activity to only 5% of the Ram is a silly mistake. but anyway, that's how things are and we have to live
It-I. e. find how to work around it.
There are two ways to allocate much more memory than the limit:
One way is to allocate memory from native code. using the ndk (Native Development Kit) and JNI, it's possible to allocate memory from the C level (e.g. malloc/free or new/delete), and such allocations are not counted towards the 24 MB limit. it's true, allocating
Memory from native code is not as convenient as from Java, but it can be used to store some large amounts of data in RAM (even image data ).
Another way, which works well for images, is to use OpenGL textures-the texture memory is not counted towards the limit.
To see how much memory your app has really allocated you can use Android. OS. Debug. getnativeheapallocatedsize ().
Using either of the two techniques presented above, on a Nexus One, I cocould easily allocate 300 MB for a single foreground process-more than 10 times the default 24 MB limit.