Greg Copeland <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > I've started playing a little with Postgres to determine if there were > memory leaks running around. After some very brief checking, I'm > starting[1] to think that the answer is yes. Has anyone already gone > through a significant effort to locate and eradicate memory leaks?
Yes, this has been dealt with before. Have you read src/backend/utils/mmgr/README? AFAIK the major problems these days are not in the backend as a whole, but in the lesser-used PL language modules (cf recent discussions). plpgsql has some issues too, I suspect, but not as bad as pltcl etc. Possibly the best answer is to integrate the memory-context notion into those modules; if they did most of their work in a temp context that could be freed once per PL statement or so, the problems would pretty much go away. It's fairly difficult to get anywhere with standard leak-tracking tools, since they don't know anything about palloc. What's worse, it is *not* a bug for a routine to palloc space it never pfrees, if it knows that it's palloc'ing in a short-lived memory context. The fact that a context may be released with much still-allocated memory in it is not a bug but a feature; but try teaching that to any standard leak checker... regards, tom lane ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 3: if posting/reading through Usenet, please send an appropriate subscribe-nomail command to [EMAIL PROTECTED] so that your message can get through to the mailing list cleanly