Bug #11174
closedthreads memory leak
Description
There's strong memory growth during intensive thread using.
Script to demonstrate the problem (on x86_64-linux):
loop {
10.times { 1000.times.map { Thread.new { } }.each(&:join) }
GC.start # not necessary, just to be sure
puts File.open('/proc/self/status').grep(/VmRSS:/).first
}
Running this script shows RSS growing from 45 Mb at the start time to 700 Mb after few minutes.
$ ruby thread_memleak4.rb
VmRSS: 45036 kB
VmRSS: 66748 kB
VmRSS: 87024 kB
...
VmRSS: 678052 kB
Files
Updated by cvss (Kirill Vechera) over 9 years ago
- ruby -v changed from 2.2.0 to 2.2.3, 2.2.0, 2.1.0, 2.0.0, 1.9.3
I've checked the bug on older versions and the 2.2-head: leaks all but 1.8.7
$ ruby --version
ruby 2.2.3p139 (2015-07-01) [x86_64-linux]
$ ruby /tmp/thread_memleak4.rb
VmRSS: 47152 kB
VmRSS: 72872 kB
VmRSS: 90448 kB
VmRSS: 105752 kB
$ ruby --version
ruby 1.8.7 (2014-01-28 patchlevel 376) [x86_64-linux]
$ ruby /tmp/thread_memleak4.rb
VmRSS: 2496 kB
VmRSS: 3688 kB
VmRSS: 2768 kB
VmRSS: 2536 kB
VmRSS: 2536 kB
Updated by parhs (Coding Gorilla) about 7 years ago
I am having similar issue. Even calling open3.capture2 which uses threads results into 250mb of rss memory after a day. 2.3.4 and all 2.3.x.. ,2.4.x
Updated by ko1 (Koichi Sasada) about 7 years ago
- Assignee set to ko1 (Koichi Sasada)
Sorry I missed it.
Updated by hartator (Julien Khaleghy) about 6 years ago
ko1 (Koichi Sasada) wrote:
Sorry I missed it.
Thanks for the awesome work on MRI.
I still have the same issue on Ruby 2.5.1 (ruby 2.5.1p57 (2018-03-29 revision 63029) [x86_64-linux-gnu]):
VmRSS: 60116 kB
VmRSS: 79448 kB
VmRSS: 89768 kB
VmRSS: 99276 kB
VmRSS: 107916 kB
VmRSS: 113728 kB
VmRSS: 118736 kB
VmRSS: 126600 kB
...
after 5 minutes
....
VmRSS: 754552 kB
VmRSS: 757876 kB
VmRSS: 760132 kB
Any idea if it's already fixed somewhere else, or you guys still working on it?
Updated by normalperson (Eric Wong) about 6 years ago
hartator@gmail.com wrote:
Issue #11174 has been updated by hartator (Julien Khaleghy).
Any idea if it's already fixed somewhere else, or you guys
still working on it?
I missed it, too :x (and now I'm too sleepy to continue...).
It seems specific to glibc (tested 2.24-11+deb9 on Debian
stable) and does not happen with jemalloc (3.6.0).
And it is NOT because of memalign fragmentation, either(*); I
disabled memalign usage to fallback to the aligned malloc+free
fallback; but can still reproduce it.
Finally, it needs multiple threads to reproduce the issue,
a single thread is not enough.
Updated by normalperson (Eric Wong) about 6 years ago
It seems specific to glibc
That should be "glibc malloc"; and only old versions. The bug
is fixed in glibc 2.28, at least; likely earlier. (glibc takes
forever to build) It's present in 2.24-11+deb9 on Debian.
MALLOC_ARENA_MAX=1 MALLOC_ARENA_TEST=1 does not seem to help.
I forgot one other parameter which IS the culprit in older glibc versions:
MALLOC_MMAP_THRESHOLD_=131072 # or whatever fixed value you want
So the sliding mmap threshold was the problem in glibc; but it's
fixed upstream, at least. Just have to wait for distros to roll
it out...
Updated by cvss (Kirill Vechera) over 5 years ago
The problem remains on a manually built glibc 2.28 with ruby 2.7.0dev (2019-06-17T14:25:47Z trunk 801d0d9dd7) [x86_64-linux]. So if the problem is related to glibc, the 2.28 version has no fix yet.
Updated by jeremyevans0 (Jeremy Evans) over 1 year ago
- Status changed from Open to Closed