I believe I have memory leak with some of my code that uses the XmlDocument class.

My program runs on a Windows 6.1.4 device (C#) and reads from a database on another server to see if any programs installed on the device need to be uninstalled and then reads from an XmlDocument to get the names of the programs that are uninstallable. The program then matches the lists and uninstalls accordingly, if necessary. This process is looped infinitely and runs in the background but what I'm noticing is that the memory creeps up slowly over time and the program eventually catches an OutOfMemoryException.

If I comment out everything and do nothing in the loop, the memory stays right around 2MB consistantly. If I leave everything but the following code commented out then the memory usage goes up .05 megabytes every minute or so continuously. Those results are with having the loop sleep for 1 second. The regular sleep speed is about 10 minutes. Any thoughts as to what could be causing the leak and if it has anything to do with the XmlDocument class?

foreach (string programName in uninstallPrograms)
{
    XmlDocument xmlDoc1 = new XmlDocument();
    xmlDoc1.LoadXml("<wap-provisioningdoc>" +
          "  <characteristic type=\"UnInstall\">" +
          "    <characteristic type=\"" + programName + "\">" +
          "     <parm name=\"uninstall\" value=\"1\"/>" +
          "    </characteristic>" +
          "  </characteristic>" +
          "</wap-provisioningdoc>");

    xmlDoc1 = ConfigurationManager.ProcessConfiguration(xmlDoc1, true);

    cmdStr += "DELETE FROM DEVICE_APPS WHERE ID = " + deviceAppIDList[count++] + "; ";

    xmlDoc1 = null;
}

// Check for pre-installed apps to uninstall
count = 0;

XmlDocument xmlDoc2 = new XmlDocument();

xmlDoc2.LoadXml("<wap-provisioningdoc><characteristic-query type=\"UnInstall\"/>" +
        "</wap-provisioningdoc>");

/**** The line below seems to be the cause of the memory leak ****/
//xmlDoc2 = ConfigurationManager.ProcessConfiguration(xmlDoc2, true);

XmlNodeList xmlNodeList = xmlDoc2.SelectNodes("wap-provisioningdoc/" +
        "characteristic[@type='UnInstall']/characteristic/@type");

xmlDoc2 = null;

cmdStr does eventually get used and is set to string.Empty at the end of the loop. At first I had didn't have xmlDoc = null; in my code but it didn't help either way. I've tried adding GC.Collect(); at the end of my loop and that seemed to help slow down the leak but it doesn't fix it entirely. Plus I've read it's not good practice to use it anyway.

Edit: So it seems to be the ConfigurationManager line that I commented out in my code above that has the memory leak. As soon as I comment out that line of code the memory leak stops. It starts back up when I uncomment this line. Is there something I need to do after making the call to ProcessConfiguration to release the memory?

Also, I am using the Microsoft.WindowsMobile.Configuration namespace for ConfigurationManager runtime version 1.1.4322 since System.Configuration does not exist in CF.

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btw, the moment someone adds a non-trivial programName, your code is toast; concatenating strings into xml without encoding them is hazardous - corrupt xml is certain. – Marc Gravell Jul 29 '11 at 21:07
FYI. Note how I edited the code sections of your question. You only need to prefix code lines by four spaces. No need for the pre and code HTML tags. – Inuyasha Jul 29 '11 at 21:09
That's true Marc, but the data that's populating programName is retrieved from a database, and the database is populated from the handheld itself. So yeah if the database were to become corrupted there would definitely be an issue but a bigger one at that. Thanks Inuyasha for the fix! – Zac Jul 29 '11 at 21:30
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4 Answers

In the code you show cmdStr gets bigger and bigger but I don't see anything ever happening with it... so this would cause your memory comsumption to grow indefinitely and result in OutOfMemory-Exception...

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Sorry, I should've mentioned that that variable does get used later on and is reset at the end of the loop with cmdStr = string.Empty;. I didn't put all the code from within my loop just because there's a lot of code in there. I've narrowed it down to this chunk though. – Zac Jul 29 '11 at 21:08
what does Global.WriteToFile do ? could you either comment these calls out and check again or show the source code of this method ? – Yahia Jul 29 '11 at 21:15
I removed those lines out, they were just to write out to a log file that I was keeping. – Zac Jul 29 '11 at 21:26
yes - but did anything change ? the memory growth still the same or slower ? – Yahia Jul 29 '11 at 21:43
Memory growth is still the same. – Zac Jul 29 '11 at 22:14
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Does this article help any? http://blogs.msdn.com/b/tess/archive/2007/10/19/net-finalizer-memory-leak-debugging-with-sos-dll-in-visual-studio.aspx

You can try tracking down what objects are hanging around and identify the reasons they are.

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learned something new :-) Though I suspect this won't work on windows Mobile since it is native... – Yahia Jul 29 '11 at 21:16
Thanks! I will take a look into this :D – Zac Jul 29 '11 at 21:35
Yeah it doesn't look like this works with Windows Mobile. It doesn't reference the CF Framework and there's no way to turn on unmanaged debugging. Thanks again though! – Zac Jul 29 '11 at 21:42
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You can change the type of cmdStr to a StringBuilder. Because string is immutable it gets copied around everytime you append something to the string.

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up vote 0 down vote accepted

Looks like the answer to this is to do it natively using DMProcessConfigXML(). Using this method does not cause a memory leak. So there must be something within the wrapper that is not releasing its resources properly.

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