| 1234567891011121314151617181920212223242526272829303132333435363738394041424344454647484950515253545556575859606162636465666768697071727374757677787980818283848586 | [[jvm-options]]=== Setting JVM optionsYou should rarely need to change Java Virtual Machine (JVM) options. If you do,the most likely change is setting the <<heap-size,heap size>>. The remainder ofthis document explains in detail how to set JVM options.The preferred method of setting JVM options (including system properties and JVMflags) is via the `jvm.options` configuration file. The default location of thisfile is `config/jvm.options` (when installing from the tar or zip distributions)and `/etc/elasticsearch/jvm.options` (when installing from the Debian or RPMpackages).This file contains a line-delimited list of JVM arguments followinga special syntax:* lines consisting of whitespace only are ignored* lines beginning with `#` are treated as comments and are ignored+[source,text]-------------------------------------# this is a comment-------------------------------------* lines beginning with a `-` are treated as a JVM option that applies  independent of the version of the JVM+[source,text]--------------------------------------Xmx2g-------------------------------------* lines beginning with a number followed by a `:` followed by a `-` are treated  as a JVM option that applies only if the version of the JVM matches the number+[source,text]-------------------------------------8:-Xmx2g-------------------------------------* lines beginning with a number followed by a `-` followed by a `:` are treated  as a JVM option that applies only if the version of the JVM is greater than or  equal to the number+[source,text]-------------------------------------8-:-Xmx2g-------------------------------------* lines beginning with a number followed by a `-` followed by a number followed  by a `:` are treated as a JVM option that applies only if the version of the  JVM falls in the range of the two numbers+[source,text]-------------------------------------8-9:-Xmx2g-------------------------------------* all other lines are rejectedYou can add custom JVM flags to this file and check this configuration into yourversion control system.An alternative mechanism for setting Java Virtual Machine options is via the`ES_JAVA_OPTS` environment variable. For instance:[source,sh]---------------------------------export ES_JAVA_OPTS="$ES_JAVA_OPTS -Djava.io.tmpdir=/path/to/temp/dir"./bin/elasticsearch---------------------------------When using the RPM or Debian packages, `ES_JAVA_OPTS` can be specified in the<<sysconfig,system configuration file>>.The JVM has a built-in mechanism for observing the `JAVA_TOOL_OPTIONS`environment variable. We intentionally ignore this environment variable in ourpackaging scripts. The primary reason for this is that on some OS (e.g., Ubuntu)there are agents installed by default via this environment variable that we donot want interfering with Elasticsearch.Additionally, some other Java programs support the `JAVA_OPTS` environmentvariable. This is *not* a mechanism built into the JVM but instead a conventionin the ecosystem. However, we do not support this environment variable, insteadsupporting setting JVM options via the `jvm.options` file or the environmentvariable `ES_JAVA_OPTS` as above.
 |