How many threads can a Java VM support?

This depends on the CPU you're using, on the OS, on what other processes are doing, on what Java release you're using, and other factors. I've seen a Windows server have > 6500 Threads before bringing the machine down. Most of the threads were not doing anything, of course. Once the machine hit around 6500 Threads (in Java), the whole machine started to have problems and become unstable.

My experience shows that Java (recent versions) can happily consume as many Threads as the computer itself can host without problems.

Of course, you have to have enough RAM and you have to have started Java with enough memory to do everything that the Threads are doing and to have a stack for each Thread. Any machine with a modern CPU (most recent couple generations of AMD or Intel) and with 1 - 2 Gig of memory (depending on OS) can easily support a JVM with thousands of Threads.

If you need a more specific answer than this, your best bet is to profile.


After reading Charlie Martin's post, I was curious about whether the heap size makes any difference in the number of threads you can create, and I was totally dumbfounded by the result.

Using JDK 1.6.0_11 on Vista Home Premium SP1, I executed Charlie's test application with different heap sizes, between 2 MB and 1024 MB.

For example, to create a 2 MB heap, I'd invoke the JVM with the arguments -Xms2m -Xmx2m.

Here are my results:

2 mb --> 5744 threads
4 mb --> 5743 threads
8 mb --> 5735 threads
12 mb --> 5724 threads
16 mb --> 5712 threads
24 mb --> 5687 threads
32 mb --> 5662 threads
48 mb --> 5610 threads
64 mb --> 5561 threads
96 mb --> 5457 threads
128 mb --> 5357 threads
192 mb --> 5190 threads
256 mb --> 5014 threads
384 mb --> 4606 threads
512 mb --> 4202 threads
768 mb --> 3388 threads
1024 mb --> 2583 threads

So, yeah, the heap size definitely matters. But the relationship between heap size and maximum thread count is INVERSELY proportional.

Which is weird.


Um, lots.

There are several parameters here. The specific VM, plus there are usually run-time parameters on the VM as well. That's somewhat driven by the operating system: what support does the underlying OS have for threads and what limitations does it put on them? If the VM actually uses OS-level threads at all, the good old red thread/green thread thing.

What "support" means is another question. If you write a Java program that is just something like

   class DieLikeADog {
         public static void main(String[] argv){
             for(;;){
                new Thread(new SomeRunaable).start();
             }
         }
    }

(and don't complain about little syntax details, I'm on my first cup of coffee) then you should certainly expect to get hundreds or thousands of threads running. But creating a Thread is relatively expensive, and scheduler overhead can get intense; it's unclear that you could have those threads do anything useful.

Update

Okay, couldn't resist. Here's my little test program, with a couple embellishments:

public class DieLikeADog {
    private static Object s = new Object();
    private static int count = 0;
    public static void main(String[] argv){
        for(;;){
            new Thread(new Runnable(){
                    public void run(){
                        synchronized(s){
                            count += 1;
                            System.err.println("New thread #"+count);
                        }
                        for(;;){
                            try {
                                Thread.sleep(1000);
                            } catch (Exception e){
                                System.err.println(e);
                            }
                        }
                    }
                }).start();
        }
    }
}

On OS/X 10.5.6 on Intel, and Java 6 5 (see comments), here's what I got

New thread #2547
New thread #2548
New thread #2549
Can't create thread: 5
New thread #2550
Exception in thread "main" java.lang.OutOfMemoryError: unable to create new native thread
        at java.lang.Thread.start0(Native Method)
        at java.lang.Thread.start(Thread.java:592)
        at DieLikeADog.main(DieLikeADog.java:6)