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I’m using the chrome dev tools to work out if there is a memory leak in some JS code. The memory timeline looks good with memory being reclaimed as expected.

enter image description here

However, the memory snapshot is confusing because it appears like there is a leak because there are entries under “Detached DOM Tree”.

Is the stuff under “Detached DOM Tree” just waiting to be garbage collected or are these real leaks?

Also does anyone know how to find out what function is holding on to a reference to a detached element?

enter image description here

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    I found that the stuff in the “Detached DOM Tree” were document fragments cached by jQuery to improve performance Aug 15, 2012 at 11:27

3 Answers 3

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Those elements are being referenced in your code but they are disconnected from the page's main DOM tree.

Simple example:

var a = document.createElement("div");

a references a disconnected element now, it cannot be GC'd when a is still in scope.

If the detached dom trees persist in memory then you are keeping references to them. It is somewhat easy with jQuery to do this, just save a reference to a traversed result and keep that around. For example:

var parents = $("span").parent("div");
$("span").remove();

Now the spans are referenced even though it doesn't appear you are referencing them anyhow. parents indirectly keeps references to all the spans through the jQuery .prevObject property. So doing parents.prevObject would give the object that references all the spans.

See example here http://jsfiddle.net/C5xCR/6/. Even though it doesn't directly appear that the spans would be referenced, they are in fact referenced by the parents global variable and you can see the 1000 spans in the Detached DOM tree never go away.

Now here's the same jsfiddle but with:

delete parents.prevObject

And you can see the spans are no longer in the detached dom tree, or anywhere for that matter. http://jsfiddle.net/C5xCR/7/

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  • +1 for mentioning global variables, didn't think of them but they could very well be the cause of many detached DOM references Aug 13, 2012 at 8:12
  • @EliasVanOotegem it doesn't necessarily have to be global, just something that is persistently kept around in a closure or object property or anything. My main point was that it's not immediately obvious how traversed jQuery keeps all the old references in memory as long as the latest traversed jQuery object is in memory. api.jquery.com/category/traversing/tree-traversal
    – Esailija
    Aug 13, 2012 at 8:18
  • Thought about mentioning that, too (hence my suggestion to remove the element sets off by retrieving the DOM reference from the jQuery object). I didn't go so far as to mention code like (function globalFunc (elem){return elem.value;})(document.getElementById('foo')); because I've gotten a lot of comments on that being overly far-fetched or something, but I linked to a question on closures and Mem-leaks instead Aug 13, 2012 at 8:29
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Is the stuff under “Detached DOM Tree” just waiting to be garbage collected or are these real leaks?

Before taking snapshot the browser will run garbage collection and sweep all objects that are not referenced. So the heap snapshot always contain only live objects. As a consequence if a Detached DOM Tree is in the snapshot than there must be an element in the tree that is referenced from JavaScript.

Also does anyone know how to find out what function is holding on to a reference to a detached element?

There should be an element(or several of them) in the same detached DOM tree that has yellow background. Such elements are referenced from the JavaScript code. You can find out who exactly keeps reference to the element in the retainers tree.

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    The second part of your answer was very helpful. Thank you. Do you know what the red background means? Feb 22, 2013 at 19:30
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    The red ones are the DOM nodes that are retained exclusively by the DOM tree and there are no direct references to them from javascript code. This means in particular that it is impossible that all elements in a detached dom tree are red as the tree would be collected in that case. There is always at least one node with either a yellow or white background. Feb 27, 2013 at 6:51
  • @YurySemikhatsky is there an easy way to find the yellow background ones?
    – Orlando
    Feb 14, 2014 at 18:30
  • @YurySemikhatsky Thanks no one was explaining what the red means. Now that you say it my memleak has a pattern :)
    – Dominic
    Jul 31, 2014 at 14:24
1

Since you've added the jQuery tag, I had a sneaky suspicion as to this being a jQuery thing. A quick google brought me to this page. When using jQ's detach method, a reference to the object is still kept in memory, so that could be causing your snapshot.

Another thing could be that jQuery has a div node at hand, which is -obviously- kept in memory, but never added to the actual dom... a sort of document.createNode('div') without appending it. This, too, will show up in the memory snapshot. You can't get around this, jQuery uses it to parse strings into html elements.

So to remove some elements from memory, use the jQuery .remove() method, and your mem will be cleared instantly.cf Esailija's comment on why remove doesn't quite fit the bill here.
$('#someElem')[0].parentNode.removeChild($('#someElem')[0]); Should remove the element altogether, but might not unbind the events. Perhaps something along the lines of:

$('#someElem').detach();//to remove any event listeners
$('#someElem')[0].parentNode.removeChild($('#someElem')[0]);//remove element all together

And, again, as Esailija pointed out in his answer, make sure that you assign references to any jQuery object (var someRef= $('.someSelector');) to a global variable, as they won't be GC'ed. Just avoid globals all together, in fact.
But to answer your question briefly, and clearly: no these aren't real memory leaks, the memory should be freed on the onbeforeunload event. The jQuery object is deleted, so all references go out of scope. At least, That's what my "research" lead me to believe. Perhaps not entirely relevant, but just as a reference Here's a question on mem-leaks I posted a while back, and with it a few things I found out..

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  • jQuery .remove() is not any different from .detach() regarding this. The difference is that .remove() clears data from jQuery.cache (which does not reference any element unless it's by user code) for the elements.
    – Esailija
    Aug 13, 2012 at 8:11
  • Thanks, it's been a while since I've used jQuery. I based that part of my answer on the article I linked too Aug 13, 2012 at 8:13
  • Note that those dom removal methods (.removeChild etc, jQuery's .remove, .detach etc) only disconnect the element from dom. This means clearing some references for it because its dom tree siblings, parents and such no longer reference to it, but it doesn't mean all references are cleared. For example, any element in the document is a global because for example window.document.body.firstChild.nextSibling.nextSibling.firstChild is a direct reference to it. Removing it from the main dom tree just removes these references but not necessarily all.
    – Esailija
    Aug 13, 2012 at 8:27
  • True, but in this context it should suffice. We've both pointed out that he should make sure the all referencing variables are eligible for Garbage Collection, hinted at the risks of closures in that respect etc... Aug 13, 2012 at 8:33
  • The elements not being in the main DOM tree is a given here because it shows up in the Detached DOM tree-category. So my point is that any dom removal method is ineffective here because they are not attached to begin with.
    – Esailija
    Aug 13, 2012 at 8:36

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