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Edit: On further examination Firefox does not seem to be doing this, but Chrome definitely does. I guess its just a bug with a new browser - for every event an I/O Read also occurs in Chrome but not in FF.

When I load the following page in a browser (I've tested in Chrome and Firefox 3 under Vista) and move the mouse around the memory always increases and does not ever seems to recede.

Is this:

  1. expected behaviour from a browser
  2. a memory leak in the browser or
  3. a memory leak in the presented code?

.

<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/strict.dtd">
<html>
<head>
	<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=iso-8859-1" />
	<title>test</title>
</head>
<body>
   <script>
	  var createEl = function (i) {
		  var el = document.createElement("div");
		  var t = document.createTextNode(i.toString());
		  el.appendChild(t);
		  t=null;
		  el.id=i.toString();

		  var fn = function (e) {};
		  el.addEventListener("mouseover", fn, false);
		  //el.onmouseover = fn;
		  fn = null;

		  try{
		    return el;
		  }
		  finally{
		    el=null;
		  }
		  //return (el = [el]).pop();
		};

		var i,x;
		for (i= 0; i < 100; i++){
		  x = createEl(i)
		  document.body.appendChild(x);
		  x = null;
		}
   </script>
</body>
</html>

The (el = [el].pop()) and the try/finally ideas are both from here, though they do not either seem to help - understandably since they are only meant to be ie6 fixes.

I have also experimented with using the addEventListener and the onmouseover methods of adding the events. The only way I have found to prevent memory from increasing is to comment out both lines of code.

flag
Do you have anything in the mouseover event handler in your real script? I can't reproduce your problem. (FF 3.0.5 Linux) – meouw Jan 29 at 13:20
The above code above is verbatim what I am testing and getting problems with. It doesn't happen right away, it takes about 20 seconds of moving your mouse around for it to start showing. It seems to me as if some buffer is eventually getting overwhelmed. – wbecker Jan 29 at 14:27
On further testing FF doesn't seem to have this issue on the above code, only Chrome. – wbecker Jan 29 at 15:05

2 Answers

vote up 0 vote down check

Memory leaks related to event handlers are, generally speaking, related to enclosures. In other words, attaching a function to an event handler which points back to its element can prevent browsers from garbage-collecting either. (Thankfully, most newer browsers have "learned the trick" and no longer leak memory in this scenario, but there are a lot of older browsers floating around out there!)

Such an enclosure could look like this:

var el = document.createElement("div");
var fnOver = function(e) {
    el.innerHTML = "Mouse over!";
};
var fnOut = function(e) {
    el.innerHTML = "Mouse out.";
};

el.addEventListener("mouseover", fnOver, false);
el.addEventListener("mouseout", fnOut, false);

document.getElementsByTagName("body")[0].appendChild(el);

The fact that fnOver and fnOut reach out to their enclosing scope to reference el is what creates an enclosure (two, actually — one for each function) and can cause browsers to leak. Your code doesn't do anything like this, so creates no enclosures, so shouldn't cause a (well-behaved) browser to leak.

Just one of the bummer of beta software, I guess. :-)

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

Well this is not how I'd handle this at all, and I can't replicate the behaviour so all I can tell you is the problem you're having memory wise is likely because of whatever is in the fn function, and unless it's a closure you should be defining fn outside of the createEl function and merely referencing it within, so only a single instance of that exists in memory.

You need to handle the event binding better though (this is not xbrowser safe - at this point I hesitate to suggest jQuery), and that whole (el =[el]).pop() reeks of voodoo cruft to me, though I'm happy to be corrected if someone can explain exactly what it achieves.

link|flag
This is just meant to be a test to identify whether a browser leaks, not xbrowser safe. I am not considering IE worth testing on for mem leaks. The fn is not a closure. It has no code inside it. – wbecker Jan 29 at 14:01
The "voodoo" ensures that no reference to el is maintained. el = [el] makes the value that used to be in el now in an array in el. The subsequent pop, removes the contents of the array, and in the process removes any ref to it. This ensures that there is no hanging refs left to the created DOM el. – wbecker Jan 29 at 14:05
so, break fn out and post the code in it if you still have a problem – annakata Jan 29 at 14:05
I changed it so that fn was declared at the line above createEl, but it has the same effect. I don't see why it would matter if the function is created per dom element or only once, so long as it is not being created for each event. My guess is that event objects themselves leak memory. – wbecker Jan 29 at 14:18
@wbecker - is there any evidence of this? google yields nothing so far, and I fail to see why the GC would be any more interested in this than the var dropping out of function scope – annakata Jan 29 at 14:21
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