While debugging a piece of code that was exhausting the memory, I found a very interesting problem, and most importantly I don't know how to fix it.
The application consists roughly of a single Survey
object, which contains a number of Question
objects. The Question objects contain a reference to the Survey they're in, this is needed to be able to fetch answers from other Questions for instance.
The following loop was causing the memory overflow:
foreach ( $survey_ids_arr as $survey_id ) {
$Survey = new Survey( $survey_id );
}
Nothing really exotic is happening in the Survey constructor;
- fetching its properties from the database
- fetching all questions' properties from the database
- creating a Question object for each question (passing a reference to $this)
- adding all Question objects to an internal array
and from looking at the code, you would say that in each iteration the object is cleared from memory because the $Survey variable is overwritten. Right?? Wrong :)
The memory is piling up as the script goes through the loop - adding memory_get_usage()
calls shows that the memory used by the Survey object isn't freed as expected, at the moment another object is assigned to the $Survey
variable. Even calling unset( $Survey )
at the end of the loop does not free the memory.
The culprit are the references to $this
that are passed to the Question objects upon creation. These references prevent the object to be cleared from memory - as the manual on php.net states:
The destructor method will be called as soon as all references to a particular object are removed
So what prevents the object from being cleaned up, is the references it has in it to itself. Nice, huh? :)
So, the problem is my object is a memory killer. Unfortunately, I can't think of a solution (other than writing an ugly method which clears the questions and calling that from the loop). The destructor in Survey is not an option; as stated above this is not called because the Question objects still have references.
Any ideas? Someone must have run into this problem already - the parent-containing-child-objects is not an uncommon architecture, is it?