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Jeremy Faden edited this page Jun 14, 2024 · 3 revisions

Running Autoplot on a 32 bit Java

Java's write-once run-anywhere mantra breaks down when you need lots of memory, as is often the case with Autoplot. The problem is even when a machine has lots of physical memory, a 32 bit JVM can only access 1GB of memory.

Making the problem worse is on some platforms the Java process is only allocated 256MB of memory, so this limit is encountered all the more quickly.

With more and more machines having 64 bit memory, why is this a problem? Oracle doesn't do much to encourage use of the 64 bit JVM, and it's easy to have 32 bit Java installed without realizing it. If you have control over which Java platform is used, make sure the 64 bit JVM is installed.

Running Autoplot with 64 bits

Even if your browser is a 32 bit browser, 64 bit Java can still be launched from it. TODO: instructions for different platforms.

The 64 bit JVM is available from Oracle's website: http://www.oracle.com/technetwork/java/javase/downloads/index.html. The JDK or JRE is needed. (JDK is used if you will be developing new Java applications, and the JRE will only run existing applications with Webstart or in Jar files.) Proceed following links, but on the downloads page, be sure to get an "x64" version and not a "x86" version.

Table Of Contents

URIs that Point to Data Files

Download a CDF and Plot it with Autoplot

Load a CDF directly from a website

URIs that Point to Data Servers

Saving to vap files

Loading vap files

Data Sources

CDF Files

HDF/NetCDF Files

Aggregation

CDAWeb

HAPI Servers

Exporting Data

Export Types

Additional controls

Aggregation

Tools

PNGWalk Tool

Data Mash Up

Events List

Run Batch

Advanced Topics

TimeSeriesBrowse and other Capabilities

Events Lists

Caching

Autoranging

Managing Autoplot's Data Cache

Using Autoplot with Python, IDL, and Matlab

Reading data into Python

Reading data into IDL

Reading data into Matlab

QDataSet Data Model

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