1

I have a PHP code snippet that reads in apache access logs for processing. I've stripped down the code to these few lines and I still find the leak. The PHP process keeps taking up more and more memory, even though the echo memory_get_usage() keeps reporting 11Mb each time.

Running with PHP 5.3.6 on an Ubuntu 12 machine. Problem goes away with PHP 5.2 on Ubuntu.

$logDir = opendir(dirname(__FILE__) . DIRECTORY_SEPARATOR . 'tempLog');
while (($file = readdir($logDir)) !== false) {
    echo($file . PHP_EOL);

    $filePath = dirname(__FILE__) . DIRECTORY_SEPARATOR . 'tempLog' . DIRECTORY_SEPARATOR . $file;
    $fhandle = fopen($filePath, 'r');
    fseek($fhandle, 0);

    while(!feof($fhandle)) {
        $line = fgets($fhandle);
    }

    fclose($fhandle);
    echo('Finished reading!' . PHP_EOL);
    echo('Memory usage: ' . memory_get_usage() . PHP_EOL . PHP_EOL);
    system('cat /proc/' . getmypid() . '/status | grep VmSize');
}

EDIT: added sample output from this script: EDIT2: added VM size

access.log.2
Finished reading!
Memory usage: 11303616
VmSize:       54972 kB

access.log.19
Finished reading!
Memory usage: 11303616
VmSize:       55896 kB

access.log.23
Finished reading!
Memory usage: 11303616
VmSize:       81372 kB

access.log.41
Finished reading!
Memory usage: 11303616
VmSize:       93120 kB

access.log.31
Finished reading!
Memory usage: 11303616
VmSize:      107508 kB

access.log.28
Finished reading!
Memory usage: 11303616
VmSize:      112128 kB

access.log.5
Finished reading!
Memory usage: 11303616
VmSize:      112920 kB

..
Finished reading!
Memory usage: 11303592
VmSize:      112920 kB

.
Finished reading!
Memory usage: 11303592
VmSize:      112920 kB

Any ideas where the memory leak might be? and how I might avoid it?

19
  • As a WAG, i'd guess that the while loop is to blame. Probably something to do with fgets.
    – zzzzBov
    Feb 22, 2013 at 18:20
  • as a wife and girlfriend? en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WAGs Feb 22, 2013 at 18:22
  • Apache access logs can get very large, how big are the ones you are trying to parse? Feb 22, 2013 at 18:23
  • @mike this should not matter with fgets. Have you tried another php version? Feb 22, 2013 at 18:24
  • 1
    You mention your collegue had no issue, as did Crozin, which PHP versions did they test against? If you deem that it isn't a PHP version issue, you may want to try using the SplFile api: php.net/manual/en/spl.files.php Feb 22, 2013 at 18:50

1 Answer 1

0

PHP doesn't do garbage collection by default (it seems from a skim of the manual). There's a couple of things you could do.

1) Enable GC with gc_enable(). You can force a GC pass using gc_collect_cycles().

2) Explicitly destroy $line using unset($line).

3
  • I've just realised this might not solve your problem. Another thing to try is to call memory_get_usage with the TRUE parameter to obtain the usage from the OS rather than PHP's internal counter. There could have been a bug in their allocator. Feb 22, 2013 at 18:55
  • good suggestions, but neither helped. Passing in TRUE did not make a difference either...rather, it reports a slightly different amount of memory, but stil the same each iteration Feb 22, 2013 at 18:58
  • Did you not get a different measure? How are you obtaining the the memory size from the OS? Feb 22, 2013 at 18:59

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