20012009 Ericsson AB. All Rights Reserved. The contents of this file are subject to the Erlang Public License, Version 1.1, (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. You should have received a copy of the Erlang Public License along with this software. If not, it can be retrieved online at http://www.erlang.org/. Software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" basis, WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the specific language governing rights and limitations under the License. Advanced Kenneth Lundin 2001-08-21 advanced.xml
Memory

A good start when programming efficiently is to have knowledge about how much memory different data types and operations require. It is implementation-dependent how much memory the Erlang data types and other items consume, but here are some figures for erts-5.2 system (OTP release R9B). (There have been no significant changes in R13.)

The unit of measurement is memory words. There exists both a 32-bit and a 64-bit implementation, and a word is therefore, 4 bytes or 8 bytes, respectively.

Data type Memory size Integer (-16#7FFFFFF < i <16#7FFFFFF) 1 word Integer (big numbers) 3..N words Atom 1 word. Note: an atom refers into an atom table which also consumes memory. The atom text is stored once for each unique atom in this table. The atom table is not garbage-collected. Float On 32-bit architectures: 4 words

On 64-bit architectures: 3 words
Binary 3..6 + data (can be shared) List 1 word per element + the size of each element String (is the same as a list of integers) 2 words per character Tuple 2 words + the size of each element Pid 1 word for a process identifier from the current local node, and 5 words for a process identifier from another node. Note: a process identifier refers into a process table and a node table which also consumes memory. Port 1 word for a port identifier from the current local node, and 5 words for a port identifier from another node. Note: a port identifier refers into a port table and a node table which also consumes memory. Reference On 32-bit architectures: 5 words for a reference from the current local node, and 7 words for a reference from another node.

On 64-bit architectures: 4 words for a reference from the current local node, and 6 words for a reference from another node. Note: a reference refers into a node table which also consumes memory.
Fun 9..13 words + size of environment. Note: a fun refers into a fun table which also consumes memory. Ets table Initially 768 words + the size of each element (6 words + size of Erlang data). The table will grow when necessary. Erlang process 327 words when spawned including a heap of 233 words. Memory size of different data types
System limits

The Erlang language specification puts no limits on number of processes, length of atoms etc., but for performance and memory saving reasons, there will always be limits in a practical implementation of the Erlang language and execution environment.

Processes

The maximum number of simultaneously alive Erlang processes is by default 32768. This limit can be raised up to at most 268435456 processes at startup (see documentation of the system flag +P in the erl(1) documentation). The maximum limit of 268435456 processes will at least on a 32-bit architecture be impossible to reach due to memory shortage.

Distributed nodes Known nodes

A remote node Y has to be known to node X if there exist any pids, ports, references, or funs (Erlang data types) from Y on X, or if X and Y are connected. The maximum number of remote nodes simultaneously/ever known to a node is limited by the maximum number of atoms available for node names. All data concerning remote nodes, except for the node name atom, are garbage-collected.

Connected nodes The maximum number of simultaneously connected nodes is limited by either the maximum number of simultaneously known remote nodes, the maximum number of (Erlang) ports available, or the maximum number of sockets available.
Characters in an atom 255 Atoms By default, the maximum number of atoms is 1048576. This limit can be raised or lowered using the +t option. Ets-tables The default is 1400, can be changed with the environment variable ERL_MAX_ETS_TABLES. Elements in a tuple The maximum number of elements in a tuple is 67108863 (26 bit unsigned integer). Other factors such as the available memory can of course make it hard to create a tuple of that size. Size of binary In the 32-bit implementation of Erlang, 536870911 bytes is the largest binary that can be constructed or matched using the bit syntax. (In the 64-bit implementation, the maximum size is 2305843009213693951 bytes.) If the limit is exceeded, bit syntax construction will fail with a system_limit exception, while any attempt to match a binary that is too large will fail. This limit is enforced starting with the R11B-4 release; in earlier releases, operations on too large binaries would in general either fail or give incorrect results. In future releases of Erlang/OTP, other operations that create binaries (such as list_to_binary/1) will probably also enforce the same limit. Total amount of data allocated by an Erlang node The Erlang runtime system can use the complete 32 (or 64) bit address space, but the operating system often limits a single process to use less than that. Length of a node name An Erlang node name has the form host@shortname or host@longname. The node name is used as an atom within the system so the maximum size of 255 holds for the node name too. Open ports

The maximum number of simultaneously open Erlang ports is by default 1024. This limit can be raised up to at most 268435456 at startup (see environment variable ERL_MAX_PORTS in erlang(3)) The maximum limit of 268435456 open ports will at least on a 32-bit architecture be impossible to reach due to memory shortage.

Open files, and sockets The maximum number of simultaneously open files and sockets depend on the maximum number of Erlang ports available, and operating system specific settings and limits. Number of arguments to a function or fun 256