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Feature #18559
closedAllocation tracing: Objects created by the parser are attributed to Kernel.require
Status:
Closed
Assignee:
-
Target version:
-
Description
Marking this as a feature, because I think it should be improved but can hardly be considered a bug.
Repro¶
Consider the following script:
# /tmp/allocation-source.rb
require 'objspace'
require 'tmpdir'
source = File.join(Dir.tmpdir, "foo.rb")
File.write(source, <<~RUBY)
# frozen_string_literal: true
class Foo
def plop
"fizz"
end
end
RUBY
ObjectSpace.trace_object_allocations_start
GC.start
gen = GC.count
require(source)
ObjectSpace.dump_all(output: $stdout, since: gen)
Expected behavior¶
I'd expect the ObjectSpace.dump_all
output to attribute all new objects, including T_IMEMO
etc, to foo.rb
Actual behavior¶
They are attributed to the source file that called Kernel.require
(so with --disable-gems
):
{"address":"0x11acaec78", "type":"CLASS", "class":"0x11acaebb0", "superclass":"0x10fa4a848", "name":"Foo", "references":["0x10fa4a848", "0x11acaea98", "0x11acaf790"], "file":"/var/folders/vy/srfpq1vn6hv5r6bzkvcw13y80000gn/T/foo.rb", "line":2, "generation":1, "memsize":544, "flags":{"wb_protected":true}}
{"address":"0x11acaeca0", "type":"IMEMO", "class":"0x8", "imemo_type":"cref", "references":["0x10fa4a848"], "file":"/tmp/allocation-source.rb", "line":19, "method":"require", "generation":1, "memsize":40, "flags":{"wb_protected":true}}
{"address":"0x11acaecc8", "type":"STRING", "class":"0x10fa42418", "frozen":true, "embedded":true, "fstring":true, "bytesize":4, "value":"fizz", "encoding":"UTF-8", "file":"/tmp/allocation-source.rb", "line":19, "method":"require", "generation":1, "memsize":40, "flags":{"wb_protected":true}}
{"address":"0x11acaecf0", "type":"ARRAY", "class":"0x10fa28f68", "frozen":true, "length":2, "embedded":true, "references":["0x11acaff88", "0x11acaf240"], "file":"/tmp/allocation-source.rb", "line":19, "method":"require", "generation":1, "memsize":40, "flags":{"wb_protected":true}}
{"address":"0x11acaed18", "type":"IMEMO", "imemo_type":"iseq", "references":["0x11acaecc8", "0x11acaf600", "0x11acaf600", "0x11acaecf0"], "file":"/tmp/allocation-source.rb", "line":19, "method":"require", "generation":1, "memsize":416, "flags":{"wb_protected":true}}
{"address":"0x11acaf1a0", "type":"ARRAY", "class":"0x10fa28f68", "frozen":true, "length":2, "embedded":true, "references":["0x11acaff88", "0x11acaf240"], "file":"/tmp/allocation-source.rb", "line":19, "method":"require", "generation":1, "memsize":40, "flags":{"wb_protected":true}}
{"address":"0x11acaf1c8", "type":"IMEMO", "imemo_type":"iseq", "references":["0x11acaed18", "0x11acaf1f0", "0x11acaf1f0", "0x11acaf1a0", "0x11acaf290"], "file":"/tmp/allocation-source.rb", "line":19, "method":"require", "generation":1, "memsize":456, "flags":{"wb_protected":true}}
{"address":"0x11acaf1f0", "type":"STRING", "class":"0x10fa42418", "frozen":true, "embedded":true, "fstring":true, "bytesize":11, "value":"<class:Foo>", "file":"/tmp/allocation-source.rb", "line":19, "method":"require", "generation":1, "memsize":40, "flags":{"wb_protected":true}}
{"address":"0x11acaf218", "type":"ARRAY", "class":"0x10fa28f68", "frozen":true, "length":2, "embedded":true, "references":["0x11acaff88", "0x11acaf240"], "file":"/tmp/allocation-source.rb", "line":19, "method":"require", "generation":1, "memsize":40, "flags":{"wb_protected":true}}
{"address":"0x11acaf240", "type":"STRING", "class":"0x10fa42418", "frozen":true, "fstring":true, "bytesize":63, "value":"/private/var/folders/vy/srfpq1vn6hv5r6bzkvcw13y80000gn/T/foo.rb", "encoding":"UTF-8", "file":"/tmp/allocation-source.rb", "line":19, "method":"require", "generation":1, "memsize":104, "flags":{"wb_protected":true}}
....
Why is it a problem?¶
This behavior makes it impossible to properly analyze which part of an application use the most memory. For instance when using heap-profiler
on an app using Bootsnap
, all objects created as a result of loading source file are attributed to bootsnap:
retained memory by gem
-----------------------------------
351.64 MB bootsnap-1.10.2
If this behaved as I expect, heap-profiler
would be able to report how much each gem contribute to the app RAM usage.
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