arguments, but you must put the <em>jvl</em> file first, e.g. <pre>
/PATH_TO_JALVIEW/Jalview /path/to/file/mymemorysetting.jvl /path/to/alignments/myalignment.fa</pre> Alternatively, you can use the standard Jalview command line
arguments with or without the jvl file (first), e.g. <pre>
- /PATH_TO_JALVIEW/Jalview /path/to/file/mymemorysetting.jvl -open http://www.jalview.org/examples/jpred_msa.fasta -annotations http://www.jalview.org/examples/jpred_msa.seq.concise -colour Clustal</pre> You can use command line arguments to control memory
+ /PATH_TO_JALVIEW/Jalview /path/to/file/mymemorysetting.jvl -open https://www.jalview.org/examples/jpred_msa.fasta -annotations https://www.jalview.org/examples/jpred_msa.seq.concise -colour Clustal</pre> You can use command line arguments to control memory
settings in Windows and macOS too: <br /> In Windows you must
use, e.g. <pre>
\PATH_TO_JALVIEW\Jalview.exe %HOMEPATH%\mymemorysetting.jvl -open %HOMEPATH%\myalignment.fa</pre> In macOS you can use the macOS <em>open</em> command like this: <pre>
<li><em><font size="3">Maximum memory limit</em><br/>
Since 2.11.1.0, Jalview's configuration includes a 'maximum memory limit':
<pre>jalview.jvmmemmax = 32G</pre>
- Adjusting this default (via a JVL file, above) will allow larger amounts of memory to be allocated to Jalview in connjunction with the jalview.jvmmempc setting.
+ Adjusting this default (via a JVL file, above) will allow larger amounts (or can limit the amount) of memory to be allocated to Jalview in conjunction with the jalview.jvmmempc setting.
+ <br/><br/>
+ </li>
+ <li><em><font size="3"><a name="jar">Command line arguments when using the executable jar (jalview-all.jar) or jalview.bin.Launcher</a></em><br/>
+ If you are using the Jalview standalone executable jar (usually named <em>jalview-all-....jar</em> with a Jalview and Java version designation) or using <em>jalview.bin.Launcher</em> to start Jalview,
+ then you can set the <em>jvmmempc</em> and <em>jvmmemmax</em> values using application command line arguments <em>-jvmmempc=PERCENT</em>
+ and <em>-jvmmemmax=MAXMEMORY</em> respectively. <em>PERCENT</em> should be an integer between 1 and 100, and MAXMEMORY should be an amount of memory in bytes, or you can append a "k", "m", "g", or "t" to use units of kilobytes, megabytes, gigabytes or terabytes, e.g.
+ <pre>java -jar jalview-all-2.11.1.0-j1.8.jar -jvmmempc=50 -jvmmemmax=20g</pre>
+ (this example will launch Jalview with a maximum heap size of the smaller of 20GB or 50% of physical memory detected).
+ <br/>The default value for jvmmempc is 90, whilst the default value for jvmmemmax is 32g if Jalview can determine a total physical memory size of the host system, and a more cautious 8g if Jalview is unable to determine a total physical memory size.
+ <br/><br/>
</li>
<li><em><font size="3"><a name="jvm"/>Directly opening Jalview
with a JVM</font></em> <br /> Launching Jalview directly with a JVM is