Is my memory leaking? Part3.

by - 20:30

(continued)

OK, now when you have some clues of possible root-causes, what's next ?

#1.If you believe you found a memory leak, first of all, do not panic. Be patient to identify if this is a true leak or a false positive. For that:

#2. Use efficient memory checking tools (Intel Parallel Inspector XE, Valgrind, etc).

#3. If you want to exclude custom memory allocator, be sure to set environment variable MMGT_OPT=0 and experiment further.

#4. If the issue has gone and you suspect it to be an allocator problem, then the chance is that it's a false positive, not an allocator issue. Though you may continue investigating, of course ;-).

#5. When designing architecture of your application, make sure you understand how your memory is managed. Do consider consistent use of smart pointers – e.g. boost's or Open CASCADE handles. That will save you multiple hours of tedious debugging.

#6. If you are paranoic about memory consumption then you might want to periodically call Standard::Purge() when using the OCC allocator (MMGT_OPT=1). It is supposed to free unused small memory blocks. You could do this when closing the MDI doc, for instance. (I never used myself though.)

#7. Advanced developers may want to step further and use fine-tune optimization techniques like use of memory pools (or regions). See NCollection_IncAllocator as an example of such. NCollection containers can accept it as an extra argument. TBB is going provide support for thread-safe pools in future versions.

#8. Black belts may also want to experiment with memory tracing routines that have been enabled in OCC allocator. See Standard_MMgrOpt::SetCallBackFunction() which is called after each alloc/free. This can be any user callback function that traces sizes of requested/freed chunks, addresses, etc.

So, here is what I was able to recall on this subject, and hope it will be helpful.
As I said in the beginning, any extensions or other best practices are welcome.

Roman

You May Also Like

0 comments