Memory Leak (David Estes-Smargiassi) Mac OS

  • The VShieldScanner memory leak just consumed 3.64 GB of 4 GB of RAM on my late 2012 MAC Mini. It takes about 15 minutes to straighten out the problem, so that machine will work. I just ordered a new Macbook Pro 13 inch, with 2.0 GHz 10th gen processor, 16 GB. Of RAM, and a 512 SSD.
  • Jun 13, 2018 memory-test:0.1 is the name of the Docker image that we are going to run a container from, remember we gave this name above; bash -c 'cd /test/; g -o main main.cpp && valgrind -leak-check=full./main' is the actual command to change directory, build the C code and finally do memory leak check with Valgrind on the executable.

Clementine is a modern music player and library organizer. Clementine is a multiplatform music player. It is inspired by Amarok 1.4, focusing on a fast and easy-to-use interface for searching and playing your music.

^ Utterly fails to address one single issue I raised.
Yes, my 'computer runs faster when it caches data in RAM instead of on disk,' but I'm talking about when that Inactive Memory 'cache' starts paging to disk. Seems to me that there's no excuse for Inactive Memory ever hitting the hard disk virtual memory scratch files; it should just be 'forgotten' at that point. 'High inactive RAM' may be what I want, but it is precisely when Inactive Memory becomes high that the disk thrashing & sluggishness begins. If running the script (or Purge, which is what I do when it happens) 'makes your computer run slower,' then why does doing so restore my robust performance to that of a freshly booted computer? Indeed, before I discovered Purge, I had to wait for a reboot to clear things up, when that wait became preferable to a miserable ongoing fit of usability-sucking spinning beachballs and accumulating scratch files.... And to repeat, no matter how much RAM one adds, it only delays the performance hit until Inactive Memory eventually fills up. (If you watch Inactive Memory, it often rises & falls with use, but sooner or later something you're doing will not occasion its reclamation, and when it 'red-lines,' that's when the usability degradation commences.)

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The browsers are a well known problem. What you see are not memory leaks per se. Firefox or Chrome (I don't know about Safari but I guess it works the same way) intentionally don't release the memory when it believes that it will need it and that you have enough. So this memory consumption is more or less dynamic and depends on the amount of memory that you have in your Mac. Lion will not change anything, on the other hand Safari 5.1 that comes with Lion is (for me at least) significantly faster than 5.0x

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Jul 20, 2011 5:09 AM