22

I have a Java web application running on Tomcat 7 that appears to have a memory leak. The average memory usage of the application increases linearly over time when under load (determined using JConsole). After the memory usage reaches the plateau, performance degrades significantly. Response times go from ~100ms to [300ms, 2500ms], so this is actually causing real problems.

JConsole memory profile of my application: application memory profile

Using VisualVM, I see that at least half the memory is being used by character arrays (i.e. char[]) and that most (roughly the same number of each, 300,000 instances) of the strings are one of the following: "Allocation Failure", "Copy", "end of minor GC", all of which seem to be related to garbage collection notification. As far as I know, the application doesn't monitor the garbage collector at all. VisualVM can't find a GC root for any of these strings, so I'm having a hard time tracking this down.

Memory Analyzer heap dump: heap dump, unreachable memory

I can't explain why the memory usage plateaus like that, but I have a theory as to why performance degrades once it does. If memory is fragmented, the application could take a long time to allocate a contiguous block of memory to handle new requests.

Comparing this to the built-in Tomcat server status application, the memory increases and levels off at, but doesn't hit a high "floor" like my application. It also doesn't have the high number of unreachable char[].

JConsole memory profile of Tomcat server status application: enter image description here

Memory Analyzer heap dump of Tomcat server status applicationp: enter image description here

Where could these strings be allocated and why are they not being garbage collected? Are there Tomcat or Java settings that could affect this? Are there specific packages that could be affect this?

4
  • How did you determine that those strings in particular are not being gc'ed?
    – djechlin
    Nov 20, 2012 at 23:23
  • When my application is idle, I force garbage collection and take a heap dump using VisualVM. The number of these strings always increases over time and always accounts for at least half the used memory. Nov 21, 2012 at 14:21
  • Memory Analyzer indicates that unreachable char[] and String objects account for 176MB of a 210MB heap. Nov 21, 2012 at 15:32
  • Forcing GC does not make it full every time, how do you know you need more memory? objects are not cleared just because they are unreachable, need full GC I think. live objects are the ones that interfere with application memory consumption, jmap -histo:live what is the value?
    – Zamir
    Nov 22, 2012 at 6:14

8 Answers 8

8

I removed the following JMX configuration from tomcat\bin\setenv.bat:

set "JAVA_OPTS=%JAVA_OPTS% 
    -Dcom.sun.management.jmxremote=true 
    -Dcom.sun.management.jmxremote.port=9090
    -Dcom.sun.management.jmxremote.ssl=false
    -Dcom.sun.management.jmxremote.authenticate=false"

I can't get detailed memory heap dumps anymore, but the memory profile looks much better: enter image description here

24 hours later, the memory profile looks the same: enter image description here

3

I would suggest to use memoryAnalyzer for analyzing your heap, it gives far more information.
http://www.eclipse.org/mat/ there is a standalone application and eclipse embedded one. you just need to run jmap on your application and analyze the result with this.

2
  • Memory Analyzer confirms what VisualVM indicated; unreachable char[] and String objects account for about 176MB of the 210MB heap. Unfortunately, this doesn't help explain where the strings are coming from or why they aren't being garbage collected. Nov 21, 2012 at 15:31
  • I would try to check your reachable objects, and not your unreachable, I would guess the problem is there.
    – Zamir
    Nov 27, 2012 at 18:53
3

The plateau is caused by the available memory dropping below the default percentage threshold which causes a Full GC. This explains why the performance drops as the JVM is constantly pausing while it tries to find and free memory.

I would usually advise to look at object caches but in your case I think your Heap size is simply too low for a Tomcat instance + webapp. I would recommend increasing your heap to 1G (-Xms1024m -Xmx1024m) and then review your memory usage again.

If you still see the same kind of behaviour then you should take another Heap dump and look at the largest consumers after String and Char. It my experience this is usually caching mechanisms. Either increase your memory further or reduce the caching stores if possible. Some caches only define number of objects so you need to understand how big each cached object is.

Once you understand your memory usage, you may be able to lower it again but IMHO 512MB would be a minimum.

Update:

You need not worry about unreachable objects as they should be cleaned up by the GC. Also, it's normal that the largest consumers by type are String and Char - most objects will contain some kind of String so it makes sense that Strings and Chars are the most common by frequency. Understanding what holds the objects that contains the Strings is the key to finding memory consumers.

2

I can recommend jvisualvm which comes along with every Java installation. Start the programm, connect to your Webapplication. Go to Monitor -> Heap Dump. It now may take some time (depending on the size). The navigation through the Heap Dump is quite easy, but the meaning you have to figure out yourself (not too complicated though), e.g.

Go to Classes (within the heapdump), select java.lang.String, right click Show in Instances View. After that you'll see on the left side table String instances currently active in your system. Klick on one String instance and you'll see some String preferenes on the right-upper part of the right table, like the value of the String.

On the bottom-right part of the right table you'll see where this String instance is referenced from. Here you have to check where the most of your *String*s are being referenced from. But with your case (176/210, good propability to find some String examples which causes your problems soon) it should be clear after some inspection where the problem lies.

1
  • I already used JVisualVM to obtain a heap dump, and Memory Analyzer indicates that the strings that are "leaking" are unreachable (i.e. nothing has a reference to them), and I can't find out what allocated them. Nov 26, 2012 at 19:11
2

I just encountered the same problem in a totally different application, so tomcat7 is probably not to blame. Memory Analyzer shows 10M unreachable String instances in the process (which has been running for about 2 months), and most/all of them have values that relate to Garbage Collection (e.g., "Allocation Failure", "end of minor GC")

Memory Analyzer

Memory Analyzer

Full GC is now running every 2s but those Strings don't get collected. My guess is that we've hit a bug in the GC code. We use the following java version:

$ java -version
java version "1.7.0_06"
Java(TM) SE Runtime Environment (build 1.7.0_06-b24)
Java HotSpot(TM) 64-Bit Server VM (build 23.2-b09, mixed mode)

and the following VM parameters:

-Xms256m -Xmx768m -server -XX:+DisableExplicitGC -XX:+UseConcMarkSweepGC 
-XX:+UseParNewGC -XX:+CMSParallelRemarkEnabled -XX:NewSize=32m -XX:MaxNewSize=64m
-XX:SurvivorRatio=8 -verbose:gc -XX:+PrintGCTimeStamps -XX:+PrintGCDetails 
-Xloggc:/path/to/file
1
  • I found this note in the documentation for Memory Analyzer that indicates that it might be "normal" GC behavior instead of a bug: "During the index creation, the Memory Analyzer removes unreachable objects because the various garbage collector algorithms tend to leave some garbage behind (if the object is too small, moving and re-assigning addresses is to expensive). This should, however, be no more than 3 to 4 percent." Dec 4, 2012 at 14:54
1

By accident, I stumbled across the following lines in our Tomcat's conf/catalina.properties file that activate String caching. This might be related to your case if you have any of them turned on. It seems others are warning to use the feature.

tomcat.util.buf.StringCache.byte.enabled=true
#tomcat.util.buf.StringCache.char.enabled=true
#tomcat.util.buf.StringCache.trainThreshold=500000
#tomcat.util.buf.StringCache.cacheSize=5000
1

Try to use MAT and make sure that when you parse the heapdump, do it not dropping out the unreachable objects.

To do so, follow the tutorial here.

Then you can run a simple Mem Leak Analysis (This is a good tutorial)

That should quickly lead you to the root cause.

0

As this sounds unspecific, one candidate would have been JSF. But then I would have expected hash maps leaking too.

Should you use JSF: In web.xml you could try:

  • javax.faces.STATE_SAVING_METHOD client
  • com.sun.faces.numberOfViewsInSession 0
  • com.sun.faces.numberOfLogicalViews 1

As for tools: JavaMelody might be interesting for continual statistics, but needs effort.

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.