(Jeopardy-style question, I wish the answer had been online when I had this issue)
Using Java 1.4, I have a method that I want to run as a thread some of the time, but not at others. So I declared it as a subclass of Thread, then either called start() or run() depending on what I needed.
But I found that my program would leak memory over time. What am I doing wrong?
I doubt that constructing an instance of a Thread or a subclass thereof leaks memory. Firstly, there's nothing of the sorts mentioned in the Javadocs or the Java Language Specification. Secondly, I ran a simple test and it also shows that no memory is leaked (at least not on Sun's JDK 1.5.0_05 on 32-bit x86 Linux 2.6):
EDIT: Just to summarize the idea of the test above. Every instance of the MyThread subclass of a Thread references its own 10 MB array. If instances of MyThread weren't garbage-collected, the JVM would run out of memory pretty quickly. However, running the test code shows that the JVM is using a small constant amount of memory regardless of the number of MyThreads constructed so far. I claim this is because instances of MyThread are garbage-collected.
This is a known bug in Java 1.4: http://bugs.sun.com/bugdatabase/view_bug.do;jsessionid=5869e03fee226ffffffffc40d4fa881a86e3:WuuT?bug_id=4533087
It's fixed in Java 1.5 but Sun doesn't intend to fix it in 1.4.
The issue is that, at construction time, a
Thread
is added to a list of references in an internal thread table. It won't get removed from that list until its start() method has completed. As long as that reference is there, it won't get garbage collected.So, never create a thread unless you're definitely going to call its
start()
method. AThread
object'srun()
method should not be called directly.A better way to code it is to implement the
Runnable
interface rather than subclassThread
. When you don't need a thread, callWhen you do need a thread:
Let's see if we could get nearer to the core of the problem:
If you start your program (lets say) 1000 x using start(), then 1000 x using run() in a thread, do both loose memory? If so, then your algorithm should be checked (i.e. for outer objects such as Vectors used in your Runnable).
If there is no such memory leak as described above then you should investigate about starting parameters and memory usage of threads regarding the JVM.