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Dim output1 = System.IO.File.ReadAllLines(file).ToString

The file size is only 1 GB. My Page file is 128 GB. Why out of memory? It's 64bit system.

3 Answers 3

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Because there are many different factors that go into OOM exceptions. Start with "Out Of Memory" Does Not Refer to Physical Memory.

An "out of memory" error almost never happens because there’s not enough storage available... Rather, an "out of memory" error happens because the process is unable to find a large enough section of contiguous unused pages in its virtual address space to do the requested mapping.

You should also read CLR Inside Out - Investigating Memory Issues.

The process can run out of virtual space if virtual memory is overly fragmented.

So do not just look at your file size verses your pagefile, you need to examine what else your application is doing and even what other processes are running on the system.

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I am a novice but I use this snippet in some of my more memory-intensive apps:


Declare Function SetProcessWorkingSetSize Lib "kernel32.dll" (ByVal process As IntPtr, ByVal minimumWorkingSetSize As Integer, ByVal maximumWorkingSetSize As Integer) As Integer
Private Shared Sub _FlushMemory()
    Try
        GC.Collect()
        GC.WaitForPendingFinalizers()
        If (Environment.OSVersion.Platform = PlatformID.Win32NT) Then
            SetProcessWorkingSetSize(Process.GetCurrentProcess().Handle, -1, -1)
            Dim myProcesses As Process() = Process.GetProcessesByName(My.Application.Info.AssemblyName)
            Dim myProcess As Process
            For Each myProcess In myProcesses
                SetProcessWorkingSetSize(myProcess.Handle, -1, -1)
            Next myProcess
        End If
    Catch ex As Exception
    End Try
End Sub
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  • And what does this do? Why does it work? Wouldn't you think that the memory manager does this for you already if you run critically low on memory? Mar 26, 2013 at 2:56
  • It clears releases the unused memory of the program (from old variables etc.) and sets the memory allocation to the lowest possible, while retaining the memory containing needed variables etc. And no. The memory might be cleared when you run critically low on memory, but not when you just want to free some unused memory, to keep your app efficient. I use this on a timer, with a reasonable interval, on forms that perhaps might need some cleanup after operations - you can see in Task Manager, that the memory is reduced to the lowest possible your app could taking up. (Quite satisfying)
    – SolaGratia
    Mar 26, 2013 at 14:40
0

Just noticed also what you wrote. you can't convert String Array (ReadAllLines) to a String.

Try this:

Dim output1 As String = IO.File.ReadAllText(file)

This returns the contents of the file as a String. If this is what you want.

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  • So what should he do instead? How would you rewrite the code to fix it? Mar 26, 2013 at 2:57
  • If I was looking for a String Array: Dim output1() As String = IO.File.ReadAllLines(file) Or if I wanted the content of the file as a String, Dim output1 As String = IO.File.ReadAllText(file)
    – SolaGratia
    Mar 26, 2013 at 13:25

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