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bug#19236: load-compiled procedure leaks memory
From: |
Chris Vine |
Subject: |
bug#19236: load-compiled procedure leaks memory |
Date: |
Sun, 30 Nov 2014 23:30:09 +0000 |
The load-compiled procedure leaks memory in guile-2.0.11 as
demonstrated by the attached test case. It should be used in
conjunction with a file 'test-file.scm' which contains only a single #f
expression. This test case should be invoked either with the "pload"
or "load" option. If invoked with the pload option, it will invoke
primitive-load, which accumulates no additional memory while executing,
and will execute normally to the end of its iterations. If invoked
with the load option, on my 32-bit machine it will steadily accumulate
a memory leak before running out of memory on consuming approximately
300M memory, after about 65,000 iterations. The memory leak seems to
arise in guile's load-compiled procedure.
The question which might be asked is "Would any sane person ever want
to invoke the load (or load-compiled) procedures more than a few times
in a practical program?". The answer to this question is "Yes", if
guile is being used as an extension framework for a C or C++ program,
and it executes guile extensions as individual tasks.
Test case:
----------------------------- snip -----------------------------
/* compile with 'gcc -O2 -Wall `pkg-config --cflags --libs guile-2.0` -o
test-guile' */
#include <libguile.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <string.h>
int load;
void* func (void* data)
{
switch (load)
{
case 0:
scm_c_eval_string("(primitive-load \"test-file.scm\")");
break;
default:
scm_c_eval_string("(load \"./test-file.scm\")");
}
return NULL;
}
int main (int argc, char *argv[])
{
int count;
if (argc != 2
|| (strcmp (argv[1], "pload") &&
strcmp (argv[1], "load")))
{
puts ("Usage: test-guile load | pload");
exit (1);
}
if (!strcmp (argv[1], "load"))
{
puts("Using load");
load = 1;
}
else
puts("Using primitive-load");
for (count = 0; count < 256000; ++count)
{
scm_with_guile(func, NULL);
if (!(count % 100)) {
printf("%d ", count);
fflush(stdout);
}
}
puts("");
return 0;
}
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