I have developed a sample for a potential problem in map.remove().
See: https://jsfiddle.net/moricio/e2wvwgu8/1/
This sample will choose a random lat/lng and will display a map centered at that point. It will wait 10 seconds before removing the map and generating a new position. It does this over and over.
If you open this sample in Chrome and check the Chrome task administrator(Shift-Esc) you will notice at each remove/add pair that the memory used by the tab will increase until your system crawls after a few hours.
Bug or my mistake?
This is a known issue in Leaflet - see https://github.com/Leaflet/Leaflet/issues/5263 and https://github.com/Leaflet/Leaflet/pull/5265 . Before that change, any L.Canvas or L.SVG (including the default one) were leaking quite a lot of memory. In Leaflet releases after that change, you should only experience a leak in one (hard to locate) circular reference to an instance of L.Draggable, which shouldn't be a big problem.
Related
Context:
I have an Node.js application which memory seems to very high, I don't know if that is memory leak or not, because it is reduced after certain period time, but some times on heavy load it keeps on increasing takes much longer to get reduced.
So going through the articles and couple of videos, i figured that i have to heap snapshot and analyse what is causing the memory leak.
Steps:
I have taken 4 snap shots as of now in my local to reproduce the memory leak.
Snapshot 1: 800MB
Snapshot 2: 1400MB
Snapshot 3: 1600MB
Snapshot 4: 2000+MB
When i uploaded the heapdump files to chrome dev tools I see there a lot of information but i don't know how to proceed from there.
Please check below screenshot, it says there is constructor [array] which has 687206 as shallow Size & Retained Size is 721414 in the columns, so when expanded that constructor i can see there are 4097716 constructors created ( refer the second screenshot attached below ).
Question
What does internal array [] means ? Why is there 4097716 created ?
How can a filter out the constructor which created by my app and showing me that instead of some system/v8 engine constructor ?
In the same screenshot one of the constructor uses global variable called tenantRequire function, this is custom global function which is being used internally in some places instead of normal Node.js require, I see the variable across all the constructor like "Array", "Object". This is that global tenantRequire code for reference. It is just patched require function with trycatch. Is this causing the memory leak somehow ?
Refer screenshot 3, [string] constructor it has 270303848 as shallow size. When i expanded it shows modules loaded by Node.js. Question why is this taking that much size ? & Why is my lodash modules are repeated in that string constructor ?
Without knowing much about your app and the actions that cause the high memory usage, it's hard to tell what could be the issue. Which tool did you use to record the heap snapshot? What is the sequence of operations you did when you recorded the snapshot? Could you add this information to your question?
A couple of remarks
You tagged the question with node.js and showed Chrome DevTools. That's ok. You can totally take a heap snapshot of a Node.js application and analyze it in Chrome DevTools. But since both Node.js and Chrome use the same JS engine (V8) and the same garbage collector (Orinoco), it might be a bit confusing for someone who reads the question. Just to make sure I understand it correctly: the issue is in a Node.js app, not in a browser app. And you are using Chrome just to analyze the heap snapshot. Right?
Also, you wrote that you took the snapshots to reproduce the memory leak. That's not correct. You performed some action which you thought would cause a high memory usage, recorded a heap snapshot, and later loaded the snapshot in Chrome DevTools to observe the supposed memory leak.
Trace first, profile second
Every time you suspect a performance issue, you should first use tracing to understand which functions in your applications are problematic (i.e. slow, create a lot of objects that have to be garbage-collected, etc).
Then, when you know which functions to focus on, you can profile them.
Try these visual tools
There are a few tools that can help you with tracing/profiling your app. Have a look a FlameScope (a web app) and node-clinic (a suite of tools). There is also Perfetto, but I think it's for Chrome apps, not Node.js apps.
I also highly recommend the V8 blog.
I am not sure if I am posting to the right StackOverFlow forum but here goes.
I have a C# desktop app. It receives images from 4 analogue cameras and it tries to detect motion and if so it saves it.
When I leave the app running say over a 24hr cycle I notice the Private Working Set has climbed by almost 500% in Task manager.
Now, I know using Task Manager is not a good idea but it does give me an indication if something is wrong.
To that end I purchase dotMemory profiler from JetBrains.
I have used its tools to determine that the Heap Generation 2 increases a lot in size. Then to a lesser degree the Large Object Heap as well.
The latter is a surprise as the image size is 360x238 and the byte array size is always less than 20K.
So, my issues are:
Should I explicitly call GC.Collect(2) for instance?
Should I be worried that my app is somehow responsible for this?
Andrew, my recommendation is to take memory snapshot in dotMemory, than explore it to find what retains most of the memory. This video will help you. If you not sure about GC.Collect, you can just tap "Force GC" button it will collect all available garbage in your app.
I have posted on this before, but thought I had tracked it down to the NW extension, however, memory leakage still occurs in the latest version. I found this thread, which discusses a similar issues, but attributes it to Behavior Space:
http://netlogo-users.18673.x6.nabble.com/Behaviorspace-Memory-Leak-td5003468.html
I have found the same symptoms. My model starts out at around 650mb, but over each run the private working set memory rises, to the point where it hits the 1024 limit. I have sufficient memory to raise this, but in reality it will only delay the onset. I am using the table output, as based on previous discussions this helps, and it does, but it only slows the rate of increase. However, eventually the memory usage rises to a point where the PC starts to struggle. I am clearing all data between runs so there should be no hangover. I noticed in the highlighted thread that they were going to run headless. I will try this, but I wondered if anyone else had noticed the issue? My other option is to break the BehSpc simulation into a few batches so the issues never arises, bit i would be nice to let the model run and walk away as it takes around 2 hours to go through.
Some possible next steps:
1) Isolate the exact conditions under which the problem does or not occur. Can you make it happen without involving the nw extension, or not? Does it still happen if you remove some of the code from your model? What if you keep removing code — when does the problem go away? What is the smallest code that still causes the problem? Almost any bug can be demonstrated with only a small amount of code — and finding that smallest demonstration is exactly what is needed in order to track down the cause and fix it.
2) Use standard memory profiling tools for the JVM to see what kind of objects are using the memory. This might provide some clues to possible causes.
In general, we are not receiving other bug reports from users along these lines. It's routine, and has been for many years now, for people to use BehaviorSpace (both headless and not) and do experiments that last for hours or even for days. So whatever it is you're experiencing almost certainly has a more specific cause -- mostly likely, in the nw extension -- that could be isolated.
I have monodevelop 2.8 on top of monotouch 5 agains the Xcode 4.2 SDK. I have been having memory issues with my iPhone app. I have been struggling with identifying the cause, so I created a test app with a master detail view. I made a minor modification to the rootcontroller to have it show 5 root items instead of the default 1. Each click of the root item adds a new DetailViewController into the navigation controller.
controller.NavigationController.PushViewController (DetailViewController, true);
In my detail view controller I've added logic that simply take an input that governs the number of times a loop happens, and then a button to trigger the loop to occur and make a call to a REST based service. Very minimal code changes from the default.
Just running the example and looking at it in instruments I seem to be up to 1.2 MB of live bytes. I think launch the detail view by touching items in the root view controller and I get up over 2 MB. Rotating the display or triggering the keyboard to open gets memory up near 3 MB. I navigate back in the controller and open a different view from the rootviewcontroller and I can see the memory grow some more. Just moving in and out of views without even triggering my custom code I can get the memory use in instruments over 3 MB. I've seen my app receive memory warnings when being up over 3 MB before. My test detail view is very basic with a text box, a label, and a button that all have outlets on them. I was under the impression I don't need to do anything special to have them cleanup. However, I don't see live bytes drop in instruments.
As an additional test, I added a Done button. When the done button is pressed I go and use RemoveFromSuperview() on each outlet, Dispose(), and then set it to null. I see the live bytes drop. But that doesn't do anything for me if the back navigation is used instead.
I'm curious if anyone can verify my expectations of seeing memory drop. Not sure if using instruments to look at live bytes is even valid or not. I'd like to determine if my testing is even valid and if there are tips for reducing memory foot print. Any links to best practices on reducing the memory foot print are appreciated as I seem to be able to get the memory to climb and my app to start getting memory warnings just by navigating around between screens.
It's hard to comment without seeing the code for the test app. Is there any way you could submit a bug report to http://bugzilla.xamarin.com and attach your test project?
There's a developer on MonoTouch working hard to add additional smarts to the GC for MonoTouch for 5.2 that I'm sure would love to have more test cases.
I would also be very interested in looking over your test case.
I'm writing a MIDlet using LWUIT and images seem to eat up incredible amounts of memory. All the images I use are PNGs and are packed inside the JAR file. I load them using the standard Image.createImage(URL) method. The application has a number of forms and each has a couple of labels an buttons, however I am fairly certain that only the active form is kept in memory (I know it isn't very trustworthy, but Runtime.freeMemory() seems to confirm this).
The application has worked well in 240x320 resolution, but moving it to 480x640 and using appropriately larger images for UI started causing out of memory errors to show up. What the application does, among other things, is download remote images. The application seems to work fine until it gets to this point. After downloading a couple of PNGs and returning to the main menu, the out of memory error is encountered. Naturally, I looked into the amount of memory the main menu uses and it was pretty shocking. It's just two labels with images and four buttons. Each button has three images used for style.setIcon, setPressedIcon and setRolloverIcon. Images range in size from 15 to 25KB but removing two of the three images used for every button (so 8 images in total), Runtime.freeMemory() showed a stunning 1MB decrease in memory usage.
The way I see it, I either have a whole lot of memory leaks (which I don't think I do, but memory leaks aren't exactly known to be easily tracked down), I am doing something terribly wrong with image handling or there's really no problem involved and I just need to scale down.
If anyone has any insight to offer, I would greatly appreciate it.
Mobile devices are usually very low on memory. So you have to use some tricks to conserve and use memory.
We had the same problem at a project of ours and we solved it like this.
for downloaded images:
Make a cache where you put your images. If you need an image, check if it is in the cachemap, if it isn't download it and put it there, if it is, use it. if memory is full, remove the oldest image in the cachemap and try again.
for other resource images:
keep them in memory only for as long as you can see them, if you can't see them, break the reference and the gc will do the cleanup for you.
Hope this helps.
There are a few things that might be happening here:
You might have seen the memory used before garbage collection, which doesn't correspond to the actual memory used by your app.
Some third party code you are running might be pooling some internal datastructures to minimize allocation. While pooling is a viable strategy, sometimes it does look like a leak. In that case, look if there is API to 'close' or 'dispose' the objects you don't need.
Finally, you might really have a leak. In this case you need to get more details on what's going on in the emulator VM (though keep in mind that it is not necessarily the same as the phone VM).
Make sure that your emulator uses JRE 1.6 as backing JVM. If you need it to use the runtime libraries from erlyer JDK, use -Xbootclasspath:<path-to-rt.jar>.
Then, after your application gets in the state you want to see, do %JAVA_HOME%\bin\jmap -dump:format=b,file=heap.bin <pid> (if you don't know the id of your process, use jps)
Now you've got a dump of the JVM heap. You can analyze it with jhat (comes with the JDK, a bit difficult to use) or some third party profilers (my preference is YourKit - it's commercial, but they have time-limited eval licenses)
I had a similar problem with LWUIT at Java DTV. Did you try flushing the images when you don't need them anymore (getAWTImage().flush())?
Use EncodedImage and resource files when possible (resource files use EncodedImage by default. Read the javadoc for such. Other comments are also correct that you need to actually observe the amount of memory, even high RAM Android/iOS devices run out of memory pretty fast with multiple images.
Avoid scaling which effectively eliminates the EncodedImage.
Did you think of the fact, that maybe loading the same image from JAR, many times, is causing many separate image objects (with identical contents) to be created instead of reusing one instance per-individual-image? This is my first guess.