5

I'm having some surprising results in my Nodetime heap snapshot:

enter image description here

Am I reading this right that there are 1706 instances of a "user" in my heap? This seems absurdly high, I'm not even quite sure how I would have allocated that many. In any case, are there any tips / tricks / hints to find out why these are hanging around? I've already used JSHint on my code to ensure there are no free globals being allocated. Everything should be wrapped in the closure scope of the request... so why aren't the users, posts, etc. being garbage collected when the request finishes? Here's some (redacted) code to show how I'm doing things...

What's very surprising is that I took the above heap snapshot about 10m after the last API call finished. So, those objects were all hanging around for long after the requests which triggered them to be allocated was finished!

code:

var User = require('./user').User,
    Q = require('q');

// this function is called via express' router, eg when the client visits myapi.com/users/zane
function getUser(req, res, next)
{
   var user = extend({},User).initialize();

   Q.ncall(user.model.find, user.model, {'username': req.arguments[0]})
   .then(function(data){
       res.writeHead(200, {});
       res.end(JSON.stringify(data));
   })
   .fail(next).end();
}

And the "User" module looks something like this:

exports.User = extend({}, {
    initialize: function() {
        var Schema = api.mongoose.Schema;
        this.schema = new Schema({
            'username': {'type':String, 'index':true}
        });
        this.model = api.db.model('users', this.schema);
    }

    // ... some other helper functions in here
});

Based upon my express code, above, I'd expect the lifespan of the user object which is allocated to be only as long as the request takes to return. Am I missing some key Node.js GC idea here?

8
  • .then(function(data){ user = null; res.writeHead(200, {}); You can set your objects to null to clean them up. (sry hit enter when I ment to hit shift-enter) Oct 14, 2012 at 15:14
  • That makes sense, to a degree... but isn't the point of node / javascript etc. to avoid this manual level of memory management...? Going through every line of my node and null'ing all objects when I'm done with them seems like an unlikely & odd solution.
    – Zane Claes
    Oct 14, 2012 at 15:14
  • 1
    because you see 'user' property in the heap snapshot means that 'user' and 'posts' properties are in the heap, i.e. are part of objects and not closure scope variables. This might give you a hint of what might be leaking. Do you see any correlation of 'user' or 'posts' property count with users in db, calls made, etc.?
    – logix
    Oct 14, 2012 at 15:25
  • 1
    the objects are not in closure scope, only retainers, e.g. variables can be. If the closure is out of scope the object will lose reference and will be GC'd unless nothing else is referencing it. In your case it seems that they are referenced somewhere else. Are the counts of objects only increasing over time?
    – logix
    Oct 14, 2012 at 16:16
  • 1
    Hm, I guess I'm not understanding this idea of "the closure out of scope." In any case, I just did some quick testing: I started the server and then made a single API call to the node server. The "posts" property had a count of 9 and a size of 1350Kb. Refreshing the same API call a few times, the size changed but the count stayed the same. In general, the counts on these objects (users, posts, etc.) seem to fluctuate, but not exceed a certain number...
    – Zane Claes
    Oct 14, 2012 at 16:51

1 Answer 1

2

This line looks suspiciously inefficient:

var user = extend({},User).initialize();

I'm assuming the extend call copies the User object and then calls its initialize method. Why are you copying the User object on each API invocation?

Then in the initialize call you create a new Mongoose schema object and then register it as a model via the api.db.model call. Wouldn't it be better to create the schema once and register it during initialization?

The combination of both of these may be resulting in more objects being created on each call than necessary, and I bet those registered Mongoose models do not GC easily.

3
  • I was not keen on this method, either, but I got it from this site: npmjs.org/package/pd Good point about the models, though.
    – Zane Claes
    Oct 15, 2012 at 0:22
  • 1
    @ZaneClaes You're misusing the extend concept here as you're not adding any methods or properties to User, you're just copying it and adding overhead.
    – JohnnyHK
    Oct 15, 2012 at 0:33
  • Well, in the omitted functions within the "User" class, I need to store instance-specific data. Eg, this.data = 'mydata'; within one of the omitted functions. In other words, I was trying to instantiate an instance of the User class, but new User().initialize(); does not work :( As I review this, though, clearly I'm doing something wrong... I just don't know how to do it right
    – Zane Claes
    Oct 15, 2012 at 0:45

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.