In Ice Cream Sandwich, when there's an Activity containing an EditText, the EditText will retain the Activity's Context even after the user leaves the Activity. To demonstrate this I've created TestLeakActivity, which allocates a large byte array. Since the Activity's Context is never garbage collected, the byte arrays accumulate on the heap, eventually causing an OutOfMemoryError. You can observe the heap growth by using the DDMS heap tool, and you can track the outstanding references to the EditText class by looking at the HPROF file in Eclipse MAT. To create memory leaks, go into LaunchActivity and just keep launching and backing out of TestLeakActivity.

LaunchActivity.java
package com.example.testleakproject;

import android.app.Activity;
import android.content.Intent;
import android.os.Bundle;
import android.view.View;
import android.view.View.OnClickListener;
import android.view.ViewGroup;
import android.widget.Button;
import android.widget.TextView;

public class LaunchActivity extends Activity {
    @Override
    public void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) {
        super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);

        Button button = new Button(this);
        button.setText("Start TestLeakActivity");
        button.setOnClickListener(new OnClickListener() {
            @Override
            public void onClick(View v) {
                Intent intent = new Intent(LaunchActivity.this, TestLeakActivity.class);
                startActivity(intent);
            }
        });

        ViewGroup container = ((ViewGroup) findViewById(android.R.id.content));
        container.addView(button);
    }
}
TestLeakActivity.java
package com.example.testleakproject;

import android.app.Activity;
import android.os.Bundle;
import android.view.ViewGroup;
import android.widget.EditText;

public class TestLeakActivity extends Activity {
    private byte[] mSomeBytes = new byte[1048576];

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

        EditText editText = new EditText(this);
        editText.setHint("TestLeakActivity");

        ViewGroup container = ((ViewGroup) findViewById(android.R.id.content));
        container.addView(editText);
    }
}
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3 Answers

up vote 5 down vote accepted

This is a known bug, that will be fixed in ICS MR1.

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You are running into the situation described in the Android resources section on memory leaks. See that page for some solutions as well.

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I feel like I'm already correctly following the guidelines set out in that article. I do not keep static references to the Context. I do not use non-static inner classes. Finally, I avoided using the Application Context instead of the Activity Context because View instance lifetime is the same as the Activity's. Furthermore, if I had used an XML layout instead of adding the EditView programmatically, I wouldn't be able to use the Application Context anyways. – Tony Wong Dec 14 '11 at 0:26
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I'm experiencing the same. My Gingerbread devices all work fine, but testing on my Galaxy Nexus this situation arises predictably. What your experiencing is likely why the MR1 and 4.0.3 updates rolled out so quickly.

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