There appears to be a memory leak with WriteableBitmaps when writing to the backbuffer directly and using the AddDirtyRect function multiple times within a single Lock/Unlock. The rectangles need to define different regions within the bitmap. The memory will then leak when you try to discard the WriteableBitmap.
You can recreate it by inserting the following code into a new WPF application. When the application starts, resize the window to create new WriteableBitmaps and watch the memory rise.
public partial class MainWindow : Window
{
public MainWindow()
{
InitializeComponent();
Image m = new Image();
m.Stretch = Stretch.Fill;
this.Content = m;
this.SizeChanged += OnSizeChanged;
}
private void OnSizeChanged(object sender, SizeChangedEventArgs args)
{
WriteableBitmap bm = new WriteableBitmap((int)args.NewSize.Width, (int)args.NewSize.Height, 96, 96, PixelFormats.Bgra32, null);
bm.Lock();
bm.AddDirtyRect(new Int32Rect(1, 1, 1, 1));
bm.AddDirtyRect(new Int32Rect(2, 2, 1, 1));
bm.Unlock();
((Image)this.Content).Source = bm;
}
}
We need to be able to discard the bitmap so keeping the same one around and reusing it is not an option. We could also not write to the backbuffer directly and instead use WritableBitmap.WritePixels() but it's slower and speed is an issue.
UPDATE: I've tested the WritePixels method and it leaks all the same. It may be an issue of calling too many writes too quickly in different regions.