Bitmap data is not allocated in the VM heap. There is a reference to it in the VM heap (which is small), but the actual data is allocated in the Native heap by the underlying Skia graphics library.
Unfortunately, while the definition of BitmapFactory.decode...() says that it returns null if the image data could not be decoded, the Skia implementation (or rather the JNI glue between the Java code and Skia) logs the message you’re seeing ("VM won't let us allocate xxxx bytes") and then throws an OutOfMemory exception with the misleading message "bitmap size exceeds VM budget".
The issue is not in the VM heap but is rather in the Native heap. The Natïve heap is shared between running applications, so the amount of free space depends on what other applications are running and their bitmap usage. But, given that BitmapFactory will not return, you need a way to figure out if the call is going to succeed before you make it.
There are routines to monitor the size of the Native heap (see the Debug class getNative methods). However, I have found that getNativeHeapFreeSize() and getNativeHeapSize() are not reliable. So in one of my applications that dynamically creates a large number of bitmaps I do the following.
The Native heap size varies by platform. So at startup, we check the maximum allowed VM heap size to determine the maximum allowed Native heap size. [The magic numbers were determined by testing on 2.1 and 2.2, and may be different on other API levels.]
long mMaxVmHeap = Runtime.getRuntime().maxMemory()/1024;
long mMaxNativeHeap = 16*1024;
if (mMaxVmHeap == 16*1024)
mMaxNativeHeap = 16*1024;
else if (mMaxVmHeap == 24*1024)
mMaxNativeHeap = 24*1024;
else
Log.w(TAG, "Unrecognized VM heap size = " + mMaxVmHeap);
Then each time we need to call BitmapFactory we precede the call by a check of the form.
long sizeReqd = bitmapWidth * bitmapHeight * targetBpp / 8;
long allocNativeHeap = Debug.getNativeHeapAllocatedSize();
if ((sizeReqd + allocNativeHeap + heapPad) >= mMaxNativeHeap)
{
// Do not call BitmapFactory…
}
Note that the heapPad is a magic number to allow for the fact that a) the reporting of Native heap size is "soft" and b) we want to leave some space in the Native heap for other applications. We are running with a 3*1024*1024 (ie 3Mbytes) pad currently.