I have been chasing down what appears to be a memory leak in a DLL built in Delphi 2007 for Win32. The memory for the threadvar variables is not freed if the threads still exist when the DLL is unloaded (there are no active calls into the DLL when it is unloaded).
The question: Is there some way to cause Delphi to free memory associated with threadvar variables? It is not as simple as just not using them. A number of the existing Delphi components use them, so even if the DLL does not explicitly declare them, it ends up using them.
A Few Details
I have tracked it down to a LocalAlloc call that occurs in response to the usage of a threadvar variable, which is Delphi's "wrapper" around thread-local storage in Win32. For the curious, the allocation call is in the Delphi source file sysinit.pas. The corresponding LocalFree call occurs only for threads that get DLL_THREAD_DETACH calls. If you have multiple threads in an application and unload a DLL, there is no DLL_THREAD_DETACH call for each thread. The DLL gets a DLL_PROCESS_DETACH and nothing else; I believe that is expected and valid. Thus, any thread-local storage allocations made on other threads are leaked.
I re-created it with a short C program that starts several "worker" threads. It loads the DLL (via LoadLibrary) on the main thread and then makes calls into an exported function on the worker threads. The function exported from the Delphi DLL assigns a value to a threadvar integer variable and returns. The C program then unloads the DLL (via FreeLibrary on the main thread) and repeats. After about 32,000 iterations, the process memory usage shown in Process Explorer grows to over 130MB. I also verified it more accurately with umdh. UMDH showed 24 bytes lost per instance. But the 130MB in Process Explorer seems to indicate about 4K per iteration; I'm guessing a 4K segment was leaked each time based on that, but I don't know for sure.
For clarification, here is the threadvar declaration and the entire exported function:
threadvar
threadint : integer;
function Startup( ulID: LongWord; hValue: Longint ): LongWord; stdcall;
begin
threadint := 123;
Result := 0;
end;
Thanks.
