I have a plugin with the following structure:
(function($) {
$.fn.drawFieldsTable = function(options) {
var settings = {
url : 'ajax/pathToFile.php'
};
if (options) {
settings = $.extend(settings, options);
}
return this.each(function() {
$this = $(this);
$.ajax({
url : settings.url,
type : 'GET',
data: // some request data here
success: function(result) {
drawFieldElements(result, $this);
}
});
function drawFieldElements(fields, container)
{
var replacement = container.clone()
.empty();
$.each(fields, function(i) {
var field;
field = buildFieldItem(i, this);
replacement.append(field);
});
container.replaceWith(replacement);
}
function buildFieldItem(i, fieldDataObj)
{
var $field = $('<div></div>')
.addClass('field')
.attr('data-fieldname', i)
.attr('data-ord', fieldDataObj.ord);
return $field;
}
});
};
})(jQuery);
I experience a major memory leak on every buildFieldItem
call. If I do not call this function or make it an empty function or just do not use its parameters in its scope - there is no leak. The leak only happens in Internet Explorer (8). In other browsers it's all ok. Requesting assistance. Thanks in advance.
UPDATE
I've updated my question for better demonstrating what buildFieldItem
actually does.
As soon as fieldDataObj
may contain about 100 items, having these 4 lines solely causes a fountain, not a leak in IE.
UPDATE 2
I've replaced clone() and empty() with creating a new div and I also minified buildFieldItem
to look like:
function buildFieldItem(i, fieldDataObj)
{
var $field = $('<div></div>')
.addClass('field');
return $field;
}
Still leaking. The only pattern that doesn't leak is:
function buildFieldItem(i, fieldDataObj)
{
var $field;
return $field;
}
Looks like a complete nonsense. The less code in function - the smaller is an overall leak. Could it be that IE can't delete a reference to the whole function or smth like that?
buildFieldItem
isn't even doing anything yet.container.clone().empty();
. If all you want is a container, why not just make a new one from scratch withvar replacement = $("<div>");
or whatever you need to cleanly make a replacement container from scratch. Cloning the entire thing and then emptying it is definitely a possible source of leaks.