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http://opensource.atlassian.com/projects/hibernate/browse/HHH-2481?page=all ]
Max Rydahl Andersen reassigned HHH-2481:
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Assign To: Scott Marlow
Scott, you have had fun with this before - could you verify/fix it ?
Big memory leak in the use of CGLIB
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Key: HHH-2481
URL:
http://opensource.atlassian.com/projects/hibernate/browse/HHH-2481
Project: Hibernate3
Type: Bug
Components: core
Versions: 3.2.2
Environment: Hibernate 3.2.2
MySQL 5.1
Reporter: Paul Malolepsy
Assignee: Scott Marlow
Priority: Critical
Attachments: fix.diff
Original Estimate: 5 minutes
Remaining: 5 minutes
The way CGLIBLazyInitializer is creating proxies is resulting in a potentially massive
memory leak.
In CGLIBLazyInitializer.getProxy() just before the proxy is instantiated, a call is made
to Enhancer.registerCallbacks() passing in the instance of CGLIBLazyInitializer that will
manage the proxy. This variable is stored in a static ThreadLocal on the CGLIB created
persistentClass so that any subsequent objects instantiated will get this callback class.
The problem is that once this ThreadLocal is set, it is never cleared, so it will stay
around (together with the object it's managing, and whatever object graph it may be
connected to) until the next time a proxy is created for that type on that thread.
For our application we have about 150 different proxy types, and our app can have over
100 threads. This results in potentially 15,000 proxy objects and their graphs stuck in
memory.
The fix for this is simple. Just make another call the Enhancer.registerCallbacks() with
a null callback arg, right after the proxy class is instantiated:
Enhancer.registerCallbacks(factory, null);
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