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JMemoryBuddy

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JMemoryBuddy provides an API to unit-test your code for memory leaks. It also provides an API to monitor a running JVM for memory leaks. It is used for internal projects at Sandec, especially for JPro. We've made it public, so everyone can fix and test their code for memory leaks in a professional way.

Together we can fix all memory leaks in the world. :-)

Dependency

The library is published at MavenCentral

Maven

<dependency>
  <groupId>de.sandec</groupId>
  <artifactId>JMemoryBuddy</artifactId>
  <version>0.5.2</version>
  <scope>test</scope>
</dependency>

Gradle

dependencies {
    compile "de.sandec:JMemoryBuddy:0.5.2"
}

How to use:

Write unit tests for memory leaks!

The method JMemoryBuddy.memoryTest is the usual way to test for leaks with JMemoryBuddy. A typicial test might look like the following:

@Test
public void simpleTest() {
    JMemoryBuddy.memoryTest(checker -> {
        A referenced = new A();
        checker.setAsReferenced(referenced);
        A notReferenced = new A();
        checker.assertCollectable(notReferenced); // notReferenced should be collectable
        checker.assertNotCollectable(referenced); // referenced should not be collectable
    });
}

The lambda provided to the memory test method is executed only once. The provided argument named "checker" provides an API to declare how the memory semantic should be.

Method
assertCollectable(ref) After executing the lambda, the provided ref must be collectable. Otherwise, an exception is thrown.
assertNotCollectable(ref) After executing the lambda, the provided ref must be not collectable. Otherwise, an exception is thrown.
setAsReferenced(ref) The provided reference won't be collected, until memoryTest finishes all it's tests.

Other utility methods:

You can also use the method assertCollectable and assertNotCollectable to check whether a single WeakReference can be collected, but usually, the memoryTest method is prefered because it results in more elegant tests.

Analyzing the heap dump:

JMemoryBuddy makes it easy to analyze the heap dump because all problematic instances are wrapped inside a class with the name AssertCollectable. Just search your heap dump with your prefered tool for this class name: visualvm

Configure JMemoryBuddy

You can configure VisualVM with SystemProperties:

Tables Effect Default
-Djmemorybuddy.createHeapDump Should a heap dump created on failure? true
-Djmemorybuddy.output The folder where the heap dump gets saved. if target exists, then "target" otherwise "build"

The following values usually shouldn't be changed but might be useful to make tests more stable or reduce the time required.

Tables Effect Default
-Djmemorybuddy.steps Maximum number of times we check whether something is collectable. You probably shouldn't change it. 10
-Djmemorybuddy.testDuration Maximum time in ms used to check whether something is collectable. You probably shouldn't change it. 1000
-Djmemorybuddy.garbageAmount How much garbage is created to stimulate the garbage collector 999999

Monitor running systems:

Mark references, where you know they can be collected:

JMemoryBuddyLive.markCollectable("description",reference);

Afterwards you can create a report during runtime with details about leaks.

System.gc();
JMemoryBuddyLive.getReport();

or search for AssertCollectableLive in a HeapDump. If the referent of an AssertCollectableLive is reachable, then you have a memory leak. It's especially interesting to see which leaks happen, if an application runs for severy hours, days, weeks or months.

FAQ - Why is no one else writing unit-tests for memory leaks?

There are various reasons for this. By spec the command System.gc() doesn't have to do anything, This makes it hard and undeterministic to test for collectability. Nevertheless, JMemoryBuddy makes testing for memory leaks reliably!. Currently, all known cases reliable and don't cause false-negative test results.

  • What can i do about SoftReferences? It's hard to check whether they are strongly reachable.

You can use the following JVM arugment: -XX:SoftRefLRUPolicyMSPerMB=0. With this argument, SoftReferences behave like WeakReferences.

  • I'm getting Leaking references during development, but not during production. What could be the reason?

A common reason might be various debuging features of you IDE. If you use the debugger, the garbage collector doesn't work reliably anymore.

Real test samples:

  • controlsfx - A simple test for a isolated JavaFX Components.
  • CSSFX (1, 2) - Various tests to make sure that a listener based code base doesn't have unwanted changes to the memory semantics.
  • JavaFX - PR for JavaFX itself to simplify some of the existing tests for memory leaks.

Projects using JMemoryBuddy:

internal developer

publish local:

./gradlew publishToMavenLocal

publish to sonatype:

./gradlew publishToSonatype closeAndReleaseStagingRepository
Open Source Agenda is not affiliated with "JMemoryBuddy" Project. README Source: Sandec/JMemoryBuddy
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