Omada 5.15.24.18 Javaw.exe RAM usage

Omada 5.15.24.18 Javaw.exe RAM usage

Omada 5.15.24.18 Javaw.exe RAM usage
Omada 5.15.24.18 Javaw.exe RAM usage
2025-10-04 11:36:58 - last edited 3 weeks ago
Hardware Version: V5
Firmware Version: 5.15.24.18

Hello,

 

OMADA 5.15.24.18 on Windows 11 23H2

 

javaw.exe is using too much RAM and I amended C:\Users\............\Omada Controller\bin\start.bat

 

..\jre\bin\javaw.exe -Xms256M -Xmx1024M -XX:MaxHeapFreeRatio=60 -XX:MinHeapFreeRatio=30 -XX:+HeapDumpOnOutOfMemoryError -XX:HeapDumpPath="%~dp0..\logs\java_heapdump.hprof" -cp "%~dp0..\properties\;%~dp0..\lib\*" com.tplink.smb.omada.starter.OmadaMain start

 

and tried other combinations of -Xms and -Xmx

 

No matter what I try javaw.exe will consume 1.8GB RAM

 

I have 11 APs and a switch....approx 30 client devices.

 

What is the secret to managing the RAM javaw.exe uses?

 

Thank you

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#1
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1 Accepted Solution
Re:Omada 5.15.24.18 Javaw.exe RAM usage-Solution
3 weeks ago - last edited 3 weeks ago

  @Korgua 

 

Thanks for posting here.

Here are some approaches to better control the RAM usage:

1. Understanding the Behavior
   - Java (especially with `javaw.exe`) often reserves more memory than specified by `-Xmx` for performance optimization
   - The Omada Controller may have its own memory requirements that override your settings

2. Effective Tweaks to Try
   - Add these JVM options to your `start.bat` (append them to your existing line):
     ```bat
     -XX:+UseG1GC -XX:MaxGCPauseMillis=200 -XX:ParallelGCThreads=4 -XX:ConcGCThreads=2 -XX:G1ReservePercent=15
     ```
     (This enables more efficient garbage collection)

   - Try these stricter memory limits:
     ```bat
     -Xms128M -Xmx768M -XX:MaxMetaspaceSize=256M
     ```

3. Omada-Specific Solutions
   - Check `C:\Users\...\Omada Controller\properties\system.properties` for any memory-related settings
   - Create/Edit `jvm.options` in the same folder with:
     ```
     -Xmx768M
     -XX:MaxMetaspaceSize=256M
     ```

 4. Alternative Approaches
   - Reduce monitoring intensity in Omada settings (fewer statistics collected = less memory)
   - Limit client history retention in Controller Settings → Monitoring → Client History

5. If All Else Fails
   - The Omada Controller is known to be memory-hungry. With your device count (11 APs + switch + 30 clients), 1.8GB might be normal operation.
   - Consider:
     - Running it on more powerful hardware
     - Using the Linux version (typically more memory-efficient)
     - Setting up the Omada Software Controller on a dedicated device

 

6. **Verification**
After making changes:
1. Stop the Omada service completely
2. Delete the `temp` folder in the Omada installation directory
3. Restart the service

Monitor with Task Manager → Details tab to see actual memory usage (look at both "Memory" and "Working Set" columns).

For your device count, 1.2GB-2GB is within expected range, but these tweaks should help prevent excessive growth beyond that.

Recommended Solution
  0  
  0  
#2
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1 Reply
Re:Omada 5.15.24.18 Javaw.exe RAM usage-Solution
3 weeks ago - last edited 3 weeks ago

  @Korgua 

 

Thanks for posting here.

Here are some approaches to better control the RAM usage:

1. Understanding the Behavior
   - Java (especially with `javaw.exe`) often reserves more memory than specified by `-Xmx` for performance optimization
   - The Omada Controller may have its own memory requirements that override your settings

2. Effective Tweaks to Try
   - Add these JVM options to your `start.bat` (append them to your existing line):
     ```bat
     -XX:+UseG1GC -XX:MaxGCPauseMillis=200 -XX:ParallelGCThreads=4 -XX:ConcGCThreads=2 -XX:G1ReservePercent=15
     ```
     (This enables more efficient garbage collection)

   - Try these stricter memory limits:
     ```bat
     -Xms128M -Xmx768M -XX:MaxMetaspaceSize=256M
     ```

3. Omada-Specific Solutions
   - Check `C:\Users\...\Omada Controller\properties\system.properties` for any memory-related settings
   - Create/Edit `jvm.options` in the same folder with:
     ```
     -Xmx768M
     -XX:MaxMetaspaceSize=256M
     ```

 4. Alternative Approaches
   - Reduce monitoring intensity in Omada settings (fewer statistics collected = less memory)
   - Limit client history retention in Controller Settings → Monitoring → Client History

5. If All Else Fails
   - The Omada Controller is known to be memory-hungry. With your device count (11 APs + switch + 30 clients), 1.8GB might be normal operation.
   - Consider:
     - Running it on more powerful hardware
     - Using the Linux version (typically more memory-efficient)
     - Setting up the Omada Software Controller on a dedicated device

 

6. **Verification**
After making changes:
1. Stop the Omada service completely
2. Delete the `temp` folder in the Omada installation directory
3. Restart the service

Monitor with Task Manager → Details tab to see actual memory usage (look at both "Memory" and "Working Set" columns).

For your device count, 1.2GB-2GB is within expected range, but these tweaks should help prevent excessive growth beyond that.

Recommended Solution
  0  
  0  
#2
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