9

I'm seeing a memory leak with the following code:

while (true) {
  console.log("Testing.");
}

I have tried defining the string and just using a constant, but it leaks memory, still:

var test = "Testing.";
while (true) {
  console.log(test);
}

The same leak happens if I use a file instead of the standard log:

var test = "Testing.";
var fh = fs.createWriteStream("test.out", {flags: "a"});
while (true) {
  fh.write(test);
}

I thought maybe it was because I wasn't properly closing the file, but I tried this and still saw the leak:

var test = "Testing";
while (true) {
  var fh = fs.createWriteStream("test.out", {flags: "a"});
  fh.end(test);
  fh.destroy();
  fh = null;
}

Does anyone have any hints as to how I'm supposed to write things without leaking memory?

1 Answer 1

10

This happens because you never give node a chance to handle "write successful" events, so they queue up endlessly. To give node a chance to handle them, you have to let the event loop do one iteration from time to time. This won't leak:

function newLine() {
  console.log("Testing.");
  process.nextTick(newLine);
}
newLine();

In real use cases, this is no issue because you nearly never have to write out so huge amounts of data at once that this matters. And if it does, cycle the event loop from time to time.

However, there's also a second issue with this that also occurs with the nextTick trick: Writing is async, and if the console/file/whatever is slower than node, node buffers data endlessly until the output is free again. To avoid this, you'll have to listen for the drain event after writing some stuff - it tells you when the pipe is free again. See here: http://nodejs.org/docs/latest/api/streams.html#event_drain_

4
  • I was able to reproduce your solution with a file handler (fs.createWriteStream), but if I try with console.log, I still get the memory leak. function writeConsole() { console.log("test"); if (typeof(gc) == "function") gc(); process.nextTick(writeConsole); } writeConsole(); When running the above code block with node test.js, I see my memory usage balloon with every iteration. When I run it as node --expose-gc test.js, I do not see any constant increase.
    – facetious
    Jan 13, 2012 at 23:40
  • @facetious: It doesn't do GC cycles too often, that'd be inefficient. Let it run for a while, and you'll see that memory usage eventually drops down to the start level.
    – thejh
    Jan 14, 2012 at 1:10
  • @facetious: I even remember experimenting with that myself - I made a memory usage graph with gnuplot, and if I remember correctly, it always got more for some time and then dropped back to approximately the start value.
    – thejh
    Jan 14, 2012 at 1:12
  • 1
    My memory continually degrades over time until I restart my node process, though. :(
    – facetious
    Jan 16, 2012 at 20:18

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