Thanks for the reply.
do you ever actually run out of
PermGen space, or are you just particularly worried about it happening?
Yes I did ran out of PermGen space.
So I am checking frequently whats the perm gen size and I see its
increasing every day.
Thanks I will try out you suggestion.
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Facchoch,
On 5/21/13 12:23 PM, fachhoch wrote:
> Thanks for your replies, I use spring , hibernate , wicket. For
> some of my objects I create proxy using spring, hibernate
> creates proxies and injection into wicket objects uses spring
> proxy.
Thanks for your replies, I use spring , hibernate , wicket.
For some of my objects I create proxy using spring, hibernate creates
proxies and injection into wicket objects uses spring proxy.
I also use groovy with spring and most of my groovy beans are of scope
prototype.
Whats the be
Note:
If you use various things like RMI and CMS GC and don't set one or two
key properties you'll always have a perm gen leak.
It's a nice feature of CMS :-)
On 5/21/2013 10:44 AM, Christopher Schultz wrote:
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Fachhoch,
On 5/21/13 10:53 AM, fa
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Fachhoch,
On 5/21/13 10:53 AM, fachhoch wrote:
> My application running on tomcat ,every day I see an increase in
> permgen space
What was PermGen usage after your webapp reached a steady-state
(usually a few minutes after launch)? How much does it