Is it possible within Java to identify the total CPU speed available as well as the total system memory? Network connection speed to the web would also be awesome.
4 Answers
This really depends on your OS, since Java will tell you little about the underlying machine. Unfortunately you have to use differing approaches depending on your OS.
If you're on Linux, take a look at the /proc/cpuinfo
filesystem for CPU info. /proc
generally has a wealth of information. Network (IO) will be reflected via the command ifconfig
.
If you're on Windows, a useful tool is WMI, which provides access to all sorts of low-level hardware stats. You can run WMI scripts via CScript. Here's a page of examples of WMI scripts.

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Properties p = System.getProperties();
p.list(System.out);
System.out.print("Total CPU:");
System.out.println(Runtime.getRuntime().availableProcessors());
System.out.println("Max Memory:" + Runtime.getRuntime().maxMemory() + "\n" + "available Memory:" + Runtime.getRuntime().freeMemory());
System.out.println("os.name=" + System.getProperty("os.name"));
try above

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`java testtest.java:3: cannot find symbol symbol : class Properties Properties p = System.getProperties(); ` – Tim Mar 30 '12 at 19:07
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@Tim you should import the Properties first i.e. `import java.util.*` – Arwan Khoiruddin Jul 20 '18 at 07:17
Memory stats are available from the Runtime object. And take a look a jconsole, a graphical client that presents information about a JMX-enabled Java Virtual Machine. It shows a lot of information including CPU usage, so you could write your own client that accesses the JMX information too.

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Yeah it seems like Java is very protective over how applications can interact with hardware. The memory stats I saw from the Runtime object are just what the VM will take, not the actual total amount available – Kirk Ouimet Aug 19 '09 at 05:47