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ActiveX components typically are written in unmanaged code, and therefore would not be cleaned up by the CLR garbage collector. You need to ensure you release any references to the ActiveX control. I think this would only create an issue though if you are recreating the ActiveX control a lot.

You can use perfmon to measure memory usage by the CLR and memory usage overall. You can use this to narrow down who is leaking the memory. (the difference would be due to unmanaged code, like the activex control)

If you do isolate it to the ActiveX or flash control, trying stubbing out those objects with a fake object that doesn't consume memory. This should let you verify it is the source of the leak.

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ActiveX components typically are written in unmanaged code, and therefore would not be cleaned up by the CLR garbage collector. You need to ensure you release any references to the ActiveX control. I think this would only create an issue though if you are recreating the ActiveX control a lot.

You can use perfmon to measure memory usage by the CLR and memory usage overall. You can use this to narrow down who is leaking the memory. (the difference would be due to unmanaged code, like the activex control)