The static variables were stored in the permgen space(also called the method area). The static variables are stored in the Heap itself.
Static methods are stored in Metaspace space of native heap as they are associated to the class in which they reside not to the objects of that class. But their local variables and the passed arguments are stored in the stack.
The static variables are stored in the data segment of the memory. The data segment is a part of the virtual address space of a program. All the static variables that do not have an explicit initialization or are initialized to zero are stored in the uninitialized data segment( also known as the BSS segment).
Static variable's memory is allocated at the start of the program, in regular memory, instead of the stack (memory set aside specifically for the program). the advantage of this is that it makes your variable or procedure totally constant, and you can't accidentally change the value.
Static methods (in fact all methods) as well as static variables are stored in the PermGen
section of the heap, since they are part of the reflection data (class related data, not instance related). As of Java 8 PermGen has been replaced by MetaSpace and as per JEP 122 it only holds meta-data while static fields are stored in the heap.
Note that this mostly applies to Oracle's Hotspot JVM and others that are based on it. However, not every JVM has PermGen or Metaspace like Eclipse OpenJ9.
Update for clarification:
Note that only the variables and their technical values (primitives or references) are stored in PermGen space.
If your static variable is a reference to an object that object itself is stored in the normal sections of the heap (young/old generation or survivor space). Those objects (unless they are internal objects like classes etc.) are not stored in PermGen space.
Example:
static int i = 1; //the value 1 is stored in the PermGen section
static Object o = new SomeObject(); //the reference(pointer/memory address) is stored in the PermGen section, the object itself is not.
Do not rely on finalize()
as it's not guaranteed to run. It is totally up to the JVM to decide when to run the garbage collector and what to collect, even if an object is eligible for garbage collection.
Of course you can set a static variable to null and thus remove the reference to the object on the heap but that doesn't mean the garbage collector will collect it (even if there are no more references).
Additionally finalize()
is run only once, so you have to make sure it doesn't throw exceptions or otherwise prevent the object to be collected. If you halt finalization through some exception, finalize()
won't be invoked on the same object a second time.
A final note: how code, runtime data etc. are stored depends on the JVM which is used, i.e. HotSpot might do it differently than JRockit and this might even differ between versions of the same JVM. The above is based on HotSpot for Java 5 and 6 (those are basically the same) since at the time of answering I'd say that most people used those JVMs. Due to major changes in the memory model as of Java 8, the statements above might not be true for Java 8 HotSpot - and I didn't check the changes of Java 7 HotSpot, so I guess the above is still true for that version, but I'm not sure here.
Prior to Java 8:
The static variables were stored in the permgen space(also called the method area).
PermGen Space is also known as Method Area
PermGen Space used to store 3 things
From Java 8 onwards
The static variables are stored in the Heap itself.From Java 8 onwards the PermGen Space have been removed and new space named as MetaSpace is introduced which is not the part of Heap any more unlike the previous Permgen Space. Meta-Space is present on the native memory (memory provided by the OS to a particular Application for its own usage) and it now only stores the class meta-data.
The interned strings and static variables are moved into the heap itself.
For official information refer : JEP 122:Remove the Permanent Gen Space
Class variables(Static variables) are stored as part of the Class object
associated with that class. This Class object can only be created by JVM and is stored in permanent generation
.
Also some have answered that it is stored in non heap area which is called Method Area.
Even this answer is not wrong. It is just a debatable topic whether Permgen Area is a part of heap or not. Obviously perceptions differ from person to person. In my opinion we provide heap space and permgen space differently in JVM arguments. So it is a good assumption to treat them differently.
Another way to see it
Memory pools are created by JVM memory managers during runtime. Memory pool may belong to either heap or non-heap memory.A run time constant pool is a per-class or per-interface run time representation of the constant_pool table in a class file. Each runtime constant pool is allocated from the Java virtual machine’s method area and Static Variables are stored in this Method Area. Also this non-heap is nothing but perm gen area.Actually Method area is part of perm gen.(Reference)
This is a question with a simple answer and a long-winded answer.
The simple answer is the heap. Classes and all of the data applying to classes (not instance data) is stored in the Permanent Generation section of the heap.
The long answer is already on stack overflow:
There is a thorough description of memory and garbage collection in the JVM as well as an answer that talks more concisely about it.
It is stored in the heap referenced by the class definition. If you think about it, it has nothing to do with stack because there is no scope.
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