4.3 KiB
JVM Options
Memory Limit
By default, the image declares an initial and maximum Java memory-heap limit of 1 GB. There are several ways to adjust the memory settings:
MEMORY
: "1G" by default, can be used to adjust both initial (Xms
) and max (Xmx
) memory heap settings of the JVMINIT_MEMORY
: independently sets the initial heap sizeMAX_MEMORY
: independently sets the max heap size
The values of all three are passed directly to the JVM and support format/units as <size>[g|G|m|M|k|K]
.
!!! example "Using docker run"
```
-e MEMORY=2G
```
or to use init and max memory:
```
-e INIT_MEMORY=1G -e MAX_MEMORY=4G
```
!!! example "Using compose file"
```
environment:
MEMORY: 2G
```
or to use init and max memory:
```
environment:
INIT_MEMORY: 1G
MAX_MEMORY: 4G
```
To let the JVM calculate the heap size from the container declared memory limit, unset MEMORY
with an empty value, such as -e MEMORY=""
. By default, the JVM will use 25% of the container memory limit as the heap limit; however, as an example the following would tell the JVM to use 75% of the container limit of 4GB of memory:
!!! example "MaxRAMPercentage using compose file"
```
environment:
MEMORY: ""
JVM_XX_OPTS: "-XX:MaxRAMPercentage=75"
deploy:
limits:
memory: 4G
```
!!! important The settings above only set the Java heap limits. Memory resource requests and limits on the overall container should also account for non-heap memory usage. An extra 25% is a general best practice.
Extra JVM Options
General JVM options can be passed to the Minecraft Server invocation by passing a JVM_OPTS
environment variable. The JVM requires -XX
options to precede -X
options, so those can be declared in JVM_XX_OPTS
. Both variables are space-delimited, raw JVM arguments.
docker run ... -e JVM_OPTS="-someJVMOption someJVMOptionValue" ...
NOTE When declaring JVM_OPTS
in a compose file's environment
section with list syntax, do not include the quotes:
environment:
- EULA=true
- JVM_OPTS=-someJVMOption someJVMOptionValue
Using object syntax is recommended and more intuitive:
environment:
EULA: "true"
JVM_OPTS: "-someJVMOption someJVMOptionValue"
# or
# JVM_OPTS: -someJVMOption someJVMOptionValue
As a shorthand for passing several system properties as -D
arguments, you can instead pass a comma separated list of name=value
or name:value
pairs with JVM_DD_OPTS
. (The colon syntax is provided for management platforms like Plesk that don't allow =
inside a value.)
For example, instead of passing
JVM_OPTS: -Dfml.queryResult=confirm -Dname=value
you can use
JVM_DD_OPTS: fml.queryResult=confirm,name=value
Enable Remote JMX for Profiling
To enable remote JMX, such as for profiling with VisualVM or JMC, set the environment variable ENABLE_JMX
to "true", set JMX_HOST
to the IP/host running the Docker container, and add a port forwarding of TCP port 7091, such as:
!!! example
With `docker run`
```
-e ENABLE_JMX=true -e JMX_HOST=$HOSTNAME -p 7091:7091
```
If needing to map to a different port, then also set the environment variable JMX_PORT
to the desired host port.
!!! example
With a compose file:
```yaml
environment:
ENABLE_JMX: true
JMX_HOST: ${HOSTNAME}
JMX_PORT: "7092"
ports:
- "7092:7092"
```
Enable Aikar's Flags
Aikar has done some research into finding the optimal JVM flags for GC tuning, which becomes more important as more users are connected concurrently. PaperMC also has an explanation of what the JVM flags are doing.
The set of flags documented there can be added using
-e USE_AIKAR_FLAGS=true
When MEMORY
is greater than or equal to 12G, then the Aikar flags will be adjusted according to the article.