I have an activity using an xml layout where a WebView is embedded. I am not using the WebView in my activity code at all, all it does is sitting there in my xml layout and being visible.

Now, when I finish the activity, I find that my activity is not being cleared from memory. (I check via hprof dump). The activity is entirely cleared though if I remove the WebView from the xml layout.

I already tried a

webView.destroy();
webView = null;

in onDestroy() of my activity, but that doesn't help much.

In my hprof dump, my activity (named 'Browser') has the following remaining GC roots (after having called destroy() on it):

com.myapp.android.activity.browser.Browser
  - mContext of android.webkit.JWebCoreJavaBridge
    - sJavaBridge of android.webkit.BrowserFrame [Class]
  - mContext of android.webkit.PluginManager
    - mInstance of android.webkit.PluginManager [Class]  

I found that another developer has experienced similar thing, see the reply of Filipe Abrantes on: http://www.curious-creature.org/2008/12/18/avoid-memory-leaks-on-android/

Indeed a very interesting post. Recently I had a very hard time troubleshooting a memory leak on my Android app. In the end it turned out that my xml layout included a WebView component that, even if not used, was preventing the memory from being g-collected after screen rotations/app restart… is this a bug of the current implementation, or is there something specific that one needs to do when using WebViews

Now, unfortunately there has been no reply on the blog or the mailing list about this question yet. Therefore I am wondering, is that a bug in the SDK (maybe similar to the MapView bug as reported http://code.google.com/p/android/issues/detail?id=2181) or how to get the activity entirely off the memory with a webview embedded?

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Does this occur if you dynamically create the WebView? – ktingle Jun 28 '10 at 8:40
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I just tested that, but doesn't make a difference. – Mathias Lin Jun 28 '10 at 10:55
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Meanwhile I filed a bug report at code.google.com/p/android/issues/detail?id=9375 but maybe somebody has a workaround for it; then please post it. – Mathias Lin Jun 28 '10 at 11:03
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Ok. Another test with little modification: when I create the WebView programatically and set 'this' (the activity) as the context, the activity would still remain in memory. When I use getApplicationContext() though, it's ok and the activity get's removed without any kept references. – Mathias Lin Jun 28 '10 at 12:54
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3 Answers

up vote 16 down vote accepted

I conclude from above comments and further tests, that the problem is a bug in the SDK: when creating a WebView via XML layout, the activity is passed as the context for the WebView, not the application context. When finishing the activity, the WebView still keeps references to the activity, therefore the activity doesn't get removed from the memory. I filed a bug report for that , see the link in the comment above.

webView = new WebView(getApplicationContext());
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ty for that getApplicationContext() actually worked on my memory leak when creating the WebView. But when i add the webview to another ViewGroup the memory Leak appears again. My wild guess is that adopts the parent's baseContext. Is there anyworkAround to that? I create the parent with getApplicationContext() too... so i guess i'm out of theories – weakwire Sep 20 '11 at 1:34
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Note that using the application context means that you won't be able to click on links in your webview, since doing so will result in a crash: "Calling startActivity() from outside of an Activity context requires the FLAG_ACTIVITY_NEW_TASK flag. Is this really what you want?" – emmby Jan 20 at 23:47
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Here's a subclass of WebView that uses the above hack to seamlessly avoid memory leaks:

package com.mycompany.view;

import android.app.Activity;
import android.content.Context;
import android.content.Intent;
import android.net.Uri;
import android.util.AttributeSet;
import android.webkit.WebView;
import android.webkit.WebViewClient;

/**
 * see http://stackoverflow.com/questions/3130654/memory-leak-in-webview and http://code.google.com/p/android/issues/detail?id=9375
 * Note that the bug does NOT appear to be fixed in android 2.2 as romain claims
 *
 * Also, you must call {@link #destroy()} from your activity's onDestroy method.
 */
public class NonLeakingWebView extends WebView {
    public NonLeakingWebView(Context context) {
        super(context.getApplicationContext());
        setWebViewClient( new MyWebViewClient((Activity)context) );
    }

    public NonLeakingWebView(Context context, AttributeSet attrs) {
        super(context.getApplicationContext(), attrs);
        setWebViewClient(new MyWebViewClient((Activity)context));
    }

    public NonLeakingWebView(Context context, AttributeSet attrs, int defStyle) {
        super(context.getApplicationContext(), attrs, defStyle);
        setWebViewClient(new MyWebViewClient((Activity)context));
    }


    protected static class MyWebViewClient extends WebViewClient {
        protected WeakReference<Activity> activityRef;

        public MyWebViewClient( Activity activity ) {
            this.activityRef = new WeakReference<Activity>(activity);
        }

        @Override
        public boolean shouldOverrideUrlLoading(WebView view, String url) {
            try {
                final Activity activity = activityRef.get();
                if( activity!=null )
                    activity.startActivity(new Intent(Intent.ACTION_VIEW, Uri.parse(url)));
            }catch( RuntimeException ignored ) {
                // ignore any url parsing exceptions
            }
            return true;
        }
    }
}

To use it, just replace WebView with NonLeakingWebView in your layouts

                    <com.mycompany.view.NonLeakingWebView
                            android:layout_width="fill_parent"
                            android:layout_height="wrap_content"
                            ...
                            />

Then make sure to call NonLeakingWebView.destroy() from your activity's onDestroy method.

Note that this webclient should handle the common cases, but it may not be as full-featured as a regular webclient. I haven't tested it for things like flash, for example.

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Found only one issue with that way of implementation: having WebView in DialogFragment I've received ContextThemeWrapper in the constructor instead of Activity ans so ClassCastException. – sandrstar Mar 22 at 10:29
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I have had some luck with this method:

Put a FrameLayout in your xml as a container, lets call it web_container. Then programmatically ad the WebView as mentioned above. onDestroy, remove it from the FrameLayout.

Say this is somewhere in your xml layout file e.g. layout/your_layout.xml

<FrameLayout
    android:id="@+id/web_container"
    android:layout_width="fill_parent"
    android:layout_height="wrap_content"/>

Then after you inflate the view, add the WebView instantiated with the application context to your FrameLayout. onDestroy, call the webview's destroy method and remove it from the view hierarchy or you will leak.

public class TestActivity extends Activity {
    private FrameLayout mWebContainer;
    private WebView mWebView;

    @Override
    protected void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) {
        super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);

        setContentView(R.layout.your_layout);

        mWebContainer = (FrameLayout) findViewById(R.id.web_container);
        mWebView = new WebView(getApplicationContext());
        mWebContainer.addView(mWebView);
    }

    @Override
    protected void onDestroy() {
        super.onDestroy();
        mWebContainer.removeAllViews();
        mWebView.destroy();
    }
}

Also FrameLayout as well as the layout_width and layout_height were arbitrarily copied from an existing project where it works. I assume another ViewGroup would work and I am certain other layout dimensions will work.

This solution also works with RelativeLayout in place of FrameLayout.

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