I have a problem with memory use in my java app and for the life of me I can't understand why the garbage collector isn't sorting it out. The code is as follows:
public void foo() {
for(int i=0; i<50000; i++) {
bar(i);
}
}
private void bar(int i) {
LargeObject o = new LargeObject();
...
dao.save(o);
}
My problem is that instances of LargeObject are not getting garbage collected - to identify this I've profiled with jprofiler and looked at the heap. LargeObject instances are never referenced by class variables, in fact they're not referenced anywhere outside of bar()
. I'm clutching at straws I feel but could this be related to where the transactions start/end? I've tried changing bar()
to public and annotating with Propogation.REQUIRES_NEW
and also changing the annotation on foo()
to Propogation.NEVER
to no avail.
The code inside the dao looks like this:
public void save(LargeObject o) {
hibernateTemplate.getSessionFactory().getCurrentSession().saveOrUpdate(o);
}
The garbage collection definitely runs as I see it's activity in jprofiler. foo()
takes about 30 mins, bar()
takes 36ms, garbage collection spikes roughly every 60 secs.
To answer the question why I know for sure they're not being garbage collected - nothing in the system references LargeObject yet I see instances of them on the heap increasing as foo()
is executing.
dao.save(o);