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I am in the middle of a huge application in a team of developers and the memory is something to consider early on. When I run the program as it is, it takes about 44 MB of memory (Found from the Task manager). I then create 10,000 bodies. The memory usage is now about 83 MB. I have a method to destroy the bodies when I click space, this is how it looks.

public static void disposeAllBodies(){
    Array<Body> bodies = new Array<Body>();
    world.getBodies(bodies);
    int destroyCount = 0;
    System.out.println("Attempting to destroy " + world.getBodyCount()+ " bodies");
    for(Body b : bodies){
        world.destroyBody(b);
        destroyCount++;
    }

    System.out.println("Successfully destroyed " + destroyCount + " body(s), " + world.getBodyCount() + " remain");


}

It disposes all the bodies with no problem, and these were the only things in the application. After they are disposed, the memory goes down to about 66MB for a few seconds then jumps up to 78 MB and stays there.

So I am wondering is there a better way to dispose these bodies? This application will be creating millions of bodies but most will be destroyed, however if the memory just keeps going up, it won't be able to handle this much disposing since the memory stays pretty much static.

Also, the CPU goes from 0.2% (before any bodies) to 23% (when 10,000 bodies present) then dwon to 2.3% (when disposed bodies). So even the CPU is doing more work after the disposing of bodies.

Thanks for any help!

Update: The code for creating the bodies is as follows:

BodyDef bodyDef = new BodyDef();
    bodyDef.type = type;
    bodyDef.position.set(new Vector2(position.x, position.y));

    Body body = world.createBody(bodyDef);

    FixtureDef fixtureDef = new FixtureDef();
    Fixture fixture;
    if(isCircle){
        CircleShape circle = new CircleShape();
        circle.setRadius(dimensions.x);
        fixtureDef.shape = circle;
        fixture = body.createFixture(fixtureDef);
        circle.dispose();
    }else{
        PolygonShape rectangle = new PolygonShape();
        rectangle.setAsBox(dimensions.x, dimensions.y);
        fixtureDef.shape = rectangle;
        fixture = body.createFixture(fixtureDef);
        rectangle.dispose();
    }

These are all just Box2D bodies, no sprites attached or anything. Thanks!

5
  • could you also include the code you use to create the bodies?
    – Ata Keskin
    Jul 16, 2016 at 12:29
  • Is is just box2d bodies you're creating/destroying? Do you add anything (like an Entity/Actor instance) to the body's UserData that might not be getting freed/disposed? When you create your bodies, specifically the fixtures, do you destroy any shape objects you use during creation? (eg shape = new PolygonShape(); etc; fixtureDef.shape = shape; shape.dispose();). Are you creating new textures anywhere that you don't need and don't dispose? etc..
    – Peter R
    Jul 16, 2016 at 14:31
  • Updated answer guys
    – Pookie
    Jul 17, 2016 at 8:23
  • @Luke, are you sure that there is any problem at all? In general, heap-allocated memory is not returned to the operating system until process termination, even if it is deallocated within the process. But in subsequent allocations the process will try to reuse previously deallocated memory if possible, so the process memory volume will not increase so much. I cannot test it for libgdx in particular, but usually the things work in this way. Jul 23, 2016 at 15:43
  • Seems to be working as intended (this is probably just jvm overhead which the GC will take care of). There is nothing wrong with the code you posted. However, you can optimize if you would use object pooling and reuse objects (like the CircleShape).
    – p.streef
    Jul 27, 2016 at 7:33

1 Answer 1

5
+50

Did you try a stripped down version of the "box2d only" code you posted to see if it still has the same problem? The reason I ask is that you also posted another question on "changing FixtureDef properties" at Changing FixtureDef properties Java Libgdx and you've given a lot more of your overall code. (The code from this question is a subset of the code from the other question). Looking at that code, there could be some issues.

In the other question you put bodies, bodyDefs, fixtures and fixtureDefs into a HashMap, you don't show how you retrieve/clear the map. That might/might not cause memory leaks. I'd say likely not, but you never know.

But I did see this bit, which I'm pretty sure will cause issues:

public void attachNewSprite(String internalPath){
    entitySprite = new Sprite(new Texture(Gdx.files.internal(internalPath)));
    ((Body)bodyObjects.get(BodyReferences.BODY)).setUserData(entitySprite);
}

In this question you said you used no sprites, but if you do the above somewhere in your code, each new Texture() will take up memory. You have to explicitly dispose each texture you create. You shouldn't really be creating a new Texture each time you create a new Sprite. Ideally, you create the texture once, then use the Sprite, which is a TextureRegion, to map to the texture. Then dispose the texture when you're all done (at the end of the level/game/etc). In order to dispose the texture, you'll have to keep a reference to it.

Edit/Update:

I had some time this morning so I took your posted code and added a bit to create a barebones simple app with your body creation and body deletion code. I setup a Timer to fire every X seconds just to see what happens when you create/destroy 10k bodies and the code you posted seemed fine. So I think your issue may be elsewhere with code you haven't posted. The memory on my machine would fluctuate a bit (you never really know when the GC will kick in, but it never really topped above 45 MB).

Unless you see something different below than what you're doing (or if you have more code to post, etc), I don't see an issue with what you've shared so far.

import java.util.concurrent.ThreadLocalRandom;

import com.badlogic.gdx.ApplicationListener;
import com.badlogic.gdx.math.Vector2;
import com.badlogic.gdx.physics.box2d.Body;
import com.badlogic.gdx.physics.box2d.BodyDef;
import com.badlogic.gdx.physics.box2d.BodyDef.BodyType;
import com.badlogic.gdx.physics.box2d.CircleShape;
import com.badlogic.gdx.physics.box2d.Fixture;
import com.badlogic.gdx.physics.box2d.FixtureDef;
import com.badlogic.gdx.physics.box2d.PolygonShape;
import com.badlogic.gdx.physics.box2d.World;
import com.badlogic.gdx.utils.Array;
import com.badlogic.gdx.utils.Timer;
import com.badlogic.gdx.utils.Timer.Task;

public class Memory implements ApplicationListener {

    private static World world;

       private static void createNewBodies(boolean isCircle, Vector2 position, Vector2 dimensions) {
            BodyDef bodyDef = new BodyDef();
            //bodyDef.type = type; //all bodies here are dynamic
            bodyDef.type =  BodyType.DynamicBody;
            bodyDef.position.set(position);

            Body body = world.createBody(bodyDef);

            FixtureDef fixtureDef = new FixtureDef();
            Fixture fixture;
            if(isCircle){
                CircleShape circle = new CircleShape();
                circle.setRadius(dimensions.x);
                fixtureDef.shape = circle;
                fixture = body.createFixture(fixtureDef);
                circle.dispose();
            }else{
                PolygonShape rectangle = new PolygonShape();
                rectangle.setAsBox(dimensions.x, dimensions.y);
                fixtureDef.shape = rectangle;
                fixture = body.createFixture(fixtureDef);
                rectangle.dispose();
            }
       }

       public static void disposeAllBodies(){
            Array<Body> bodies = new Array<Body>();
            world.getBodies(bodies);
            int destroyCount = 0;
            System.out.println("Attempting to destroy " + world.getBodyCount()+ " bodies");
            for(Body b : bodies){
                world.destroyBody(b);
                destroyCount++;
            }

            System.out.println("Successfully destroyed " + destroyCount + " body(s), " + world.getBodyCount() + " remain");

        }

       private static void buildAllBodies() {
           int minPos = 10;
           int maxPos = 400;
           int minWidthHeight = 50;

           Vector2 position = new Vector2();
           Vector2 dimensions = new Vector2();

           for (int i=0; i<10000; i=i+2) {
               position.x = ThreadLocalRandom.current().nextInt(minPos, maxPos+1);
               position.y = ThreadLocalRandom.current().nextInt(minPos*2, maxPos*2+1);
               dimensions.x = ThreadLocalRandom.current().nextInt(minWidthHeight, minWidthHeight+1);
               dimensions.y = dimensions.x;
               createNewBodies(true, position, dimensions);
               createNewBodies(false, position, dimensions);
           }
       }

       @Override
       public void create() {

           world = new World ( new Vector2(0.0f, -9.8f), true);

           Timer.schedule(new Task() {
                   @Override
                   public void run() {
                       buildAllBodies();
                       disposeAllBodies();
                   }
              }
               , 1.0f
               , 10.0f //how often to do the cycle (in seconds)
              );
       }

       @Override
       public void render() { }

       @Override
       public void dispose() {
           world.dispose();
       }

       @Override
       public void resize(int width, int height) { }

       @Override
       public void pause() { }

       @Override
       public void resume() { }
}
5
  • These are two separate projects, the method I posted in this question is not a static method or returning hashmaps. But why will getting the body and setting the sprite cause issues?
    – Pookie
    Jul 18, 2016 at 9:31
  • The way you set the sprite. You create a new texture, do you dispose it anywhere? github.com/libgdx/libgdx/wiki/Memory-management
    – Peter R
    Jul 18, 2016 at 12:00
  • Are you referring to this code or the previous question code.
    – Pookie
    Jul 18, 2016 at 12:06
  • entitySprite = new Sprite(new Texture(Gdx.files.internal(internalPath)));
    – Peter R
    Jul 18, 2016 at 12:27
  • 1
    @Luke, the code you've posted looks fine/normal. I updated my answer with a simple app you could try if you want. As I think it shows the memory is being freed. So could very well be something else in your code and you're looking in the wrong spot?
    – Peter R
    Jul 23, 2016 at 14:43

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