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Unlike Java, Perl uses reference count for garbage collection. I have tried searching some previous questions which speak about C++ RAII and smart pointers and Java GC but have not understood how Perl deals with the circular referencing problem.

Can anyone explain how Perl's garbage collector deals with circular references? Is there any way to reclaim circular referenced memory which are no longer used by the program or does Perl just ignores this problem altogether?

4 Answers 4

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According to my copy of Programming Perl 3rd ed., on exit Perl 5 does an "expensive mark and sweep" to reclaim circular references. You'll want to avoid circular references as much as possible because otherwise they won't be reclaimed until the program exits.

Perl 5 does offer weak references through the Scalar::Utils module.

Perl 6 will move to a pluggable garbage collected scheme (well, the underlying VM will have multiple garbage collection options and the behavior of those options can have an effect on Perl). That is, you'll be able to choose between various garbage collectors, or implement your own. Want a copying collector? Sure. Want a coloring collector? You got it. Mark/sweep, compacting, etc? Why not?

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    Nit: Perl 5 uses reference counting. That is a garbage collection scheme.
    – tsee
    Jun 4, 2010 at 9:54
  • OK, I modified the reference to Perl 6 garbage collection. Jun 4, 2010 at 17:29
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    Thanks for updating the answer. NB: Pluggable garbage collectors seems like a horrible idea. A great way to slow down things and/or produce dubious action at a distance when plugging garbage collectors which make different promises about GC time.
    – tsee
    Jun 5, 2010 at 9:33
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    I have no idea why they went for a pluggable architecture, other than (1) to say "this really is implementation defined territory" and (2) to avoid making a decision. They also went for a pluggable regular expression architecture, and that makes even less sense to me. Jun 6, 2010 at 9:04
  • reference counting isn't garbage collection. it's automated memory management. there is no collector algorithm that runs to reclaim memory that is no longer used.
    – Claudiu
    Aug 15, 2013 at 18:10
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The quick answer is that Perl 5 does not handle circular references automatically. Unless you take explicit measures in your code, any of your data structures which include circular references will not be reclaimed until the thread that created them dies. This is considered to be an acceptable tradeoff in that it avoids the need for runtime garbage collection that would slow down execution.

If your code creates data structures with circular references (i.e. a tree whose nodes contain references back to the root), you will want to use the Scalar::Util module to "weaken" the references that point back toward the root node. These weak references will not add to the reference count of whatever they point to, so the entire data structure will be automatically deallocated when the last external reference vanishes.

Example:

use Scalar::Util qw(weaken);

...

    my $new_node = { content => $content, root => $root_node };
    weaken $new_node->{root};
    push @{$root_node->{children}}, $new_node;

If you use code like this whenever you add new nodes to your data structure, then the only references to the root that are actually counted are those from outside of the structure. This is exactly what you want. Then the root, and recursively all of its children, will be reclaimed as soon as the last external reference to it vanishes.

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Have a look at Proxy Objects.

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Perl applies a mark-and-sweep alternate GC in some occasions (when a thread dies, I think) in order to reclaim circular references. Note that the "every value is a string" Perl stanza makes it difficult to create true circular references; this is feasible, but "normal" Perl code does not, which is why reference counting works well with Perl.

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  • Quick way to leak one SV perl call sub leak { my $r; $r = \$r; } While this is a contrived example it's not hard to do the equivalent without noticing it.
    – Ven'Tatsu
    Jun 4, 2010 at 18:55
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    This is plain wrong; Perl does not believe every value is a string. my $hashref = { a => 1 }; leaves $hashref as an actual reference, not string. This has been true since Perl 5, which came out in October 1994 — 17 years ago. (Of course, Perl will happily convert the reference to a string, but that conversion is one-way)
    – derobert
    Jan 16, 2012 at 22:08

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