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Is there a way for a Python program to determine how much memory it's currently using? I've seen discussions about memory usage for a single object, but what I need is total memory usage for the process, so that I can determine when it's necessary to start discarding cached data.

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12 Answers 12

553

Here is a useful solution that works for various operating systems, including Linux, Windows, etc.:

import psutil
process = psutil.Process()
print(process.memory_info().rss)  # in bytes 

Notes:

  • do pip install psutil if it is not installed yet

  • handy one-liner if you quickly want to know how many MiB your process takes:

    import os, psutil; print(psutil.Process(os.getpid()).memory_info().rss / 1024 ** 2)
    
  • with Python 2.7 and psutil 5.6.3, it was process.memory_info()[0] instead (there was a change in the API later).

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  • 7
    Why doesn't this number match the one in the process explorer? The number from psutil always seems to be larger by about 10%. Commented May 13, 2015 at 22:42
  • 69
    Note that psutil is not in the standard library Commented Aug 18, 2016 at 19:11
  • 36
    For recent versions of psutil, psutil.Process() is equivalent to psutil.Process(os.getpid()). That's one less thing you need to remember to type.
    – rnorris
    Commented Apr 26, 2019 at 3:07
  • 10
    Why do you use rss? In psutil document: rss | resident set size, vms | total program size. So I think last line should be print(process.memory_info().vms) Commented Oct 25, 2019 at 13:16
  • 5
    This answer explains difference between resident set size and virtual memory size very well.
    – zyy
    Commented Sep 10, 2020 at 2:39
296

For Unix based systems (Linux, Mac OS X, Solaris), you can use the getrusage() function from the standard library module resource. The resulting object has the attribute ru_maxrss, which gives the peak memory usage for the calling process:

>>> resource.getrusage(resource.RUSAGE_SELF).ru_maxrss
2656  # peak memory usage (kilobytes on Linux, bytes on OS X)

The Python docs don't make note of the units. Refer to your specific system's man getrusage.2 page to check the unit for the value. On Ubuntu 18.04, the unit is noted as kilobytes. On Mac OS X, it's bytes.

The getrusage() function can also be given resource.RUSAGE_CHILDREN to get the usage for child processes, and (on some systems) resource.RUSAGE_BOTH for total (self and child) process usage.

If you care only about Linux, you can alternatively read the /proc/self/status or /proc/self/statm file as described in other answers for this question and this one too.

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  • 2
    Okay, will do. I wasn't sure if SO had a process for merging questions or what. The duplicate post was partly to show people there was a standard library solution on both questions... and partly for the rep. ;) Should I delete this answer? Commented Oct 6, 2011 at 3:19
  • 8
    Mac OS definitely returns the RSS in bytes, Linux returns it in kilobytes.
    – Neil
    Commented Dec 6, 2013 at 23:33
  • 20
    The units are NOT in kilobytes. It is platform dependent, so you have to use resource.getpagesize() to find out. The given Python docs (docs.python.org/2/library/resource.html#resource-usage) is actually very clear about it. It is 4096 in my box.
    – Ben Lin
    Commented Apr 15, 2014 at 16:53
  • 6
    @BenLin Those Python docs are clearly wrong, or there is a bug on the Mac version. The unit used by getrusage and the value returned by getpagesize are definitely different.
    – Andrew
    Commented Jul 8, 2015 at 17:56
  • 19
    The question asked for current usage. Note that this is maximum usage. (Still a useful answer, just warning people who mistakenly copy-paste it.)
    – Luc
    Commented Jan 23, 2018 at 8:29
69

On Windows, you can use WMI (home page, cheeseshop):

def memory():
    import os
    from wmi import WMI
    w = WMI('.')
    result = w.query("SELECT WorkingSet FROM Win32_PerfRawData_PerfProc_Process WHERE IDProcess=%d" % os.getpid())
    return int(result[0].WorkingSet)

On Linux (from python cookbook http://code.activestate.com/recipes/286222/:

import os
_proc_status = '/proc/%d/status' % os.getpid()

_scale = {'kB': 1024.0, 'mB': 1024.0*1024.0, 'KB': 1024.0, 'MB': 1024.0*1024.0}

def _VmB(VmKey):
    '''Private.'''
    global _proc_status, _scale
     # get pseudo file  /proc/<pid>/status
    try:
        t = open(_proc_status)
        v = t.read()
        t.close()
    except:
        return 0.0  # non-Linux?
     # get VmKey line e.g. 'VmRSS:  9999  kB\n ...'
    i = v.index(VmKey)
    v = v[i:].split(None, 3)  # whitespace
    if len(v) < 3:
        return 0.0  # invalid format?
     # convert Vm value to bytes
    return float(v[1]) * _scale[v[2]]

def memory(since=0.0):
    '''Return memory usage in bytes.'''
    return _VmB('VmSize:') - since

def resident(since=0.0):
    '''Return resident memory usage in bytes.'''
    return _VmB('VmRSS:') - since

def stacksize(since=0.0):
    '''Return stack size in bytes.'''
    return _VmB('VmStk:') - since
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  • 14
    The Windows code doesn't work for me. This change does: return int(result[0].WorkingSet)
    – John Fouhy
    Commented Aug 31, 2010 at 0:46
  • 1
    This Windows code doesn't work for me on Windows 7 x64, even after John Fouhy's comment modification.
    – Basj
    Commented Feb 7, 2014 at 15:59
  • I have this error: return [ wmi_object (obj, instance_of, fields) for obj in self._raw_query(wql) ] File "C:\Python27\lib\site-packages\win32com\client\util.py", line 84, in next return _get_good_object_(self._iter.next(), resultCLSID = self.resultCLSID) pywintypes.com_error: (-2147217385, 'OLE error 0x80041017', None, None) if anyone can help me? I have win 8 x64 but python on x32
    – Radu Vlad
    Commented Sep 9, 2014 at 6:06
  • Note: I updated the windows example following John Fouhy's suggestion after inspecting the (latest) source of the wmi module. See also (1), (2).
    – jedwards
    Commented Mar 17, 2016 at 16:24
  • 1
    @jedwards: WorkingSet is a very bad number in >90% of the cases. It's just that part of memory which is currently in RAM Commented Jul 16, 2020 at 20:26
45

On unix, you can use the ps tool to monitor it:

$ ps u -p 1347 | awk '{sum=sum+$6}; END {print sum/1024}'

where 1347 is some process id. Also, the result is in MB.

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30

Current memory usage of the current process on Linux, for Python 2, Python 3, and pypy, without any imports:

def getCurrentMemoryUsage():
    ''' Memory usage in kB '''

    with open('/proc/self/status') as f:
        memusage = f.read().split('VmRSS:')[1].split('\n')[0][:-3]

    return int(memusage.strip())

It reads the status file of the current process, takes everything after VmRSS:, then takes everything before the first newline (isolating the value of VmRSS), and finally cuts off the last 3 bytes which are a space and the unit (kB).
To return, it strips any whitespace and returns it as a number.

Tested on Linux 4.4 and 4.9, but even an early Linux version should work: looking in man proc and searching for the info on the /proc/$PID/status file, it mentions minimum versions for some fields (like Linux 2.6.10 for "VmPTE"), but the "VmRSS" field (which I use here) has no such mention. Therefore I assume it has been in there since an early version.

14

Below is my function decorator which allows to track how much memory this process consumed before the function call, how much memory it uses after the function call, and how long the function is executed.

import time
import os
import psutil


def elapsed_since(start):
    return time.strftime("%H:%M:%S", time.gmtime(time.time() - start))


def get_process_memory():
    process = psutil.Process(os.getpid())
    return process.memory_info().rss


def track(func):
    def wrapper(*args, **kwargs):
        mem_before = get_process_memory()
        start = time.time()
        result = func(*args, **kwargs)
        elapsed_time = elapsed_since(start)
        mem_after = get_process_memory()
        print("{}: memory before: {:,}, after: {:,}, consumed: {:,}; exec time: {}".format(
            func.__name__,
            mem_before, mem_after, mem_after - mem_before,
            elapsed_time))
        return result
    return wrapper

So, when you have some function decorated with it

from utils import track

@track
def list_create(n):
    print("inside list create")
    return [1] * n

You will be able to see this output:

inside list create
list_create: memory before: 45,928,448, after: 46,211,072, consumed: 282,624; exec time: 00:00:00
9

Even easier to use than /proc/self/status: /proc/self/statm. It's just a space delimited list of several statistics. I haven't been able to tell if both files are always present.

/proc/[pid]/statm

Provides information about memory usage, measured in pages. The columns are:

  • size (1) total program size (same as VmSize in /proc/[pid]/status)
  • resident (2) resident set size (same as VmRSS in /proc/[pid]/status)
  • shared (3) number of resident shared pages (i.e., backed by a file) (same as RssFile+RssShmem in /proc/[pid]/status)
  • text (4) text (code)
  • lib (5) library (unused since Linux 2.6; always 0)
  • data (6) data + stack
  • dt (7) dirty pages (unused since Linux 2.6; always 0)

Here's a simple example:

from pathlib import Path
from resource import getpagesize

PAGESIZE = getpagesize()
PATH = Path('/proc/self/statm')


def get_resident_set_size() -> int:
    """Return the current resident set size in bytes."""
    # statm columns are: size resident shared text lib data dt
    statm = PATH.read_text()
    fields = statm.split()
    return int(fields[1]) * PAGESIZE


data = []
start_memory = get_resident_set_size()
for _ in range(10):
    data.append('X' * 100000)
    print(get_resident_set_size() - start_memory)

That produces a list that looks something like this:

0
0
368640
368640
368640
638976
638976
909312
909312
909312

You can see that it jumps by about 300,000 bytes after roughly 3 allocations of 100,000 bytes.

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  • 1
    For those in need of higher accuracy, documentation suggests using /proc/[pid]/smaps, but that's a bit more complicated.
    – djvg
    Commented Sep 4, 2023 at 14:38
8

For Python 3.6 and psutil 5.4.5 it is easier to use memory_percent() function listed here.

import os
import psutil
process = psutil.Process(os.getpid())
print(process.memory_percent())
1
  • 1
    this requires lib psutil
    – confiq
    Commented May 23, 2020 at 10:41
7

I like it, thank you for @bayer. I get a specific process count tool, now.

# Megabyte.
$ ps aux | grep python | awk '{sum=sum+$6}; END {print sum/1024 " MB"}'
87.9492 MB

# Byte.
$ ps aux | grep python | awk '{sum=sum+$6}; END {print sum " KB"}'
90064 KB

Attach my process list.

$ ps aux  | grep python
root       943  0.0  0.1  53252  9524 ?        Ss   Aug19  52:01 /usr/bin/python /usr/local/bin/beaver -c /etc/beaver/beaver.conf -l /var/log/beaver.log -P /var/run/beaver.pid
root       950  0.6  0.4 299680 34220 ?        Sl   Aug19 568:52 /usr/bin/python /usr/local/bin/beaver -c /etc/beaver/beaver.conf -l /var/log/beaver.log -P /var/run/beaver.pid
root      3803  0.2  0.4 315692 36576 ?        S    12:43   0:54 /usr/bin/python /usr/local/bin/beaver -c /etc/beaver/beaver.conf -l /var/log/beaver.log -P /var/run/beaver.pid
jonny    23325  0.0  0.1  47460  9076 pts/0    S+   17:40   0:00 python
jonny    24651  0.0  0.0  13076   924 pts/4    S+   18:06   0:00 grep python

Reference

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  • just an optimisation of code to avoid multi pipe ps aux | awk '/python/{sum+=$6}; END {print sum/1024 " MB"}' Commented Oct 4, 2017 at 5:06
5
import os, win32api, win32con, win32process
han = win32api.OpenProcess(win32con.PROCESS_QUERY_INFORMATION|win32con.PROCESS_VM_READ, 0, os.getpid())
process_memory = int(win32process.GetProcessMemoryInfo(han)['WorkingSetSize'])
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  • 9
    This could be improved with some explanation of what it does and how it works. Commented Nov 25, 2014 at 15:39
  • 3
    Based on the large number returned (8 digits) and how I'm not doing much of anything, I'm guessing this has to be bytes? So it's around 28.5 MB for a rather idle interactive instance. (Wow... I didn't even realize the above comment was mine from 4 years ago... that's weird.) Commented Jun 8, 2018 at 18:50
4

For Unix systems command time (/usr/bin/time) gives you that info if you pass -v. See Maximum resident set size below, which is the maximum (peak) real (not virtual) memory that was used during program execution:

$ /usr/bin/time -v ls /

    Command being timed: "ls /"
    User time (seconds): 0.00
    System time (seconds): 0.01
    Percent of CPU this job got: 250%
    Elapsed (wall clock) time (h:mm:ss or m:ss): 0:00.00
    Average shared text size (kbytes): 0
    Average unshared data size (kbytes): 0
    Average stack size (kbytes): 0
    Average total size (kbytes): 0
    Maximum resident set size (kbytes): 0
    Average resident set size (kbytes): 0
    Major (requiring I/O) page faults: 0
    Minor (reclaiming a frame) page faults: 315
    Voluntary context switches: 2
    Involuntary context switches: 0
    Swaps: 0
    File system inputs: 0
    File system outputs: 0
    Socket messages sent: 0
    Socket messages received: 0
    Signals delivered: 0
    Page size (bytes): 4096
    Exit status: 0
1
3

Using sh and os to get into python bayer's answer.

float(sh.awk(sh.ps('u','-p',os.getpid()),'{sum=sum+$6}; END {print sum/1024}'))

Answer is in megabytes.

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  • 5
    Should be noted that `sh' isn't a stdlib module. It's installable with pip, though. Commented Sep 4, 2013 at 0:00

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