% File src/library/utils/man/windows/memory.size.Rd % Part of the R package, https://www.R-project.org % Copyright 1995-2012 R Core Team % Distributed under GPL 2 or later \name{memory.size} \alias{memory.size} \alias{memory.limit} \title{Report on Memory Allocation} \description{ \code{memory.size} reports the current or maximum memory allocation of the \code{malloc} function used in this version of \R. \code{memory.limit} reports or increases the limit in force on the total allocation. } \usage{ memory.size(max = FALSE) memory.limit(size = NA) } \arguments{ \item{max}{logical. If \code{TRUE} the maximum amount of memory obtained from the OS is reported, if \code{FALSE} the amount currently in use, if \code{NA} the memory limit.} \item{size}{numeric. If \code{NA} report the memory limit, otherwise request a new limit, in Mb. Only values of up to 4095 are allowed on 32-bit \R builds, but see \sQuote{Details}.} } \details{ Command-line flag \option{--max-mem-size} sets the maximum value of obtainable memory (including a very small amount of housekeeping overhead). This cannot exceed 3Gb on 32-bit Windows, and most versions are limited to 2Gb. The minimum is currently 32Mb. If 32-bit \R is run on most 64-bit versions of Windows the maximum value of obtainable memory is just under 4Gb. For a 64-bit versions of \R under 64-bit Windows the limit is currently 8Tb. Memory limits can only be increased. Environment variable \env{R_MAX_MEM_SIZE} provides another way to specify the initial limit. } \value{ Size in Mb (1048576 bytes), rounded to 0.01 Mb for \code{memory.size} and rounded down for \code{memory.limit}. } \note{ These functions exist on other platforms but always report infinity as \R does itself provide limits on memory allocation---the OS's own facilities can be used. } \seealso{ \link{Memory-limits} for other limits. The rw-FAQ for more details and references. } \examples{ memory.size() memory.size(TRUE) memory.limit() } \keyword{utilities}