Introspect the Ruby Heap by indexing, counting, locating references to and detaching (in order to release) objects - optionally narrowing by namespace.
Memory management is an important factor within every application. It can slow down the performance of your application and even of your system. Unlike other programming languages, such as C or Pascal, Ruby does not let you handle the memory allocation directly.
The garbage collector (GC
) controls releasing allocated memory. In order to let the GC free an object, you will have to ensure that there are no references to that object or else your memory usage will grow. Finding out why memory does not get released (memory leaks) is like finding a needle in a haystack.
RubyMass can help you tackle memory leaks as you can list (and count) which Ruby objects (Ruby mass :D
) are in memory. Also, you can locate references to a certain object and remove them if wanted. Try out RubyMass and feel free to send in pull requests and/or suggestions.
Note: RubyMass is successfully tested using Ruby 1.8.7, Ruby 1.9.2 and Ruby 1.9.3
Add RubyMass in Gemfile
as a gem dependency:
gem "ruby-mass"
Run the following in your console to install with Bundler:
bundle install
Using RubyMass is pretty straightforward. All examples are based using the following code:
class Foo class Bar; end end class Thing; end class OneMoreThing; end
This is a shortcut to the ObjectSpace._id2ref
method:
$ f = Foo.new $ o = Mass[f.object_id] $ f.object_id == o.object_id #=> true
Just call Mass.index
to get a Hash containing class names with object_ids of its instances. You can narrow the result by specifying a namespace.
$ Mass.index Foo #=> {} $ f = Foo.new $ b1 = Foo::Bar.new $ b2 = Foo::Bar.new $ t = Thing.new $ f.object_id #=> 2154166500 $ b1.object_id #=> 2154037400 $ b2.object_id #=> 2154126780 $ t.object_id #=> 2154372180 $ Mass.index Foo #=> {"Foo"=>[2154166500], "Foo::Bar"=>[2154037400, 2154126780]} $ Mass.index Foo::Bar #=> {"Foo::Bar"=>[2154037400, 2154126780]} $ Mass.index Thing #=> {"Thing"=>[2154372180]} $ Mass.index #=> {"String"=>[2151797000, 2151797080, 2151797120, 2151797140, ... a lot of more classes and object_ids} $ Mass.index OneMoreThing #=> {}
The method Mass.count
returns a similar Hash as Mass.index
, but instead of arrays of object_ids it contains the number of objects. Continueing with the previous example, you will get the following results:
$ Mass.count Foo #=> {"Foo"=>1, "Foo::Bar"=>2} $ Mass.count Foo::Bar #=> {"Foo::Bar"=>2} $ Mass.count Thing #=> {"Thing"=>1} $ Mass.count #=> {"String"=>37589, "Array"=>11883, ... a lot of more classes and amounts} $ Mass.count OneMoreThing #=> {}
You can also pretty print the result of the Mass.count
method:
$ Mass.print Foo +==================================================+ Objects within Foo namespace +==================================================+ Foo::Bar: 2 Foo: 1 +==================================================+ $ Mass.print +==================================================+ Objects within environment +==================================================+ String: 37811 Array: 11899 RubyVM::InstructionSequence: 4225 Gem::Version: 2765 ... a lot of more classes and amounts +==================================================+ $ Mass.print OneMoreThing +==================================================+ Objects within OneMoreThing namespace +==================================================+ - no objects instantiated - +==================================================+
Along with indexing (and counting) objects, locating object references is very important when solving memory leakage. An example:
class Foo attr_accessor :foo end class Bar attr_accessor :fool end $ foo1 = Foo.new $ Mass.references(foo1) #=> {} $ foo2 = Foo.new $ foo2.object_id #=> 2155577620 $ foo2.foo = foo1 $ bar = Bar.new $ bar.object_id #=> 2155383980 $ bar.fool = foo1 $ Mass.references(foo1) #=> {"Foo#2155577620" => ["@foo"], "Bar#2155383980" => ["@fool"]} $ Mass.references(foo1, Foo) #=> {"Foo#2155577620" => ["@foo"]} $ Mass.references(foo1, Bar) #=> {"Bar#2155383980" => ["@fool"]} $ Mass.references(foo1, Hash) #=> {}
After locating references to a certain object, you must remove them in order to let the garbage collector free the allocated memory of that object. Just call the Mass.detach
method and it will remove the object references and invoke GC.start
instructing the garbage collector to do its job. Continueing with the previous example, you will get the following results:
$ foo1.object_id #=> 2164554700 $ Mass.index(Foo) #=> {"Foo"=>[2155577620, 2164554700]} # NOTE: Set foo1 to nil (within the block which only gets yielded after successfully detaching references) as it also is a pointer to the allocated memory $ Mass.detach(foo1){foo1 = nil} #=> true # NOTE: This ensures that Mass invokes GC.start but only after verifying that foo1 is a nil pointer $ Mass.gc!(foo1) $ Mass.index(Foo) #=> {"Foo"=>[2155577620]}
Note: Use Mass.detach
at own risk. Be sure you know what you are doing!
Please check out test/unit/test_mass.rb. You can run the unit tests with rake
within the terminal. Also, the RubyMass repo is provided with script/console
which you can use for testing purposes.
For support, remarks and requests please mail me at paul.engel@holder.nl.
Copyright © 2012 Paul Engel, released under the MIT license
holder.nl – codehero.es – gettopup.com – github.com/archan937 – twitter.com/archan937 –paul.engel@holder.nl
Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the “Software”), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED “AS IS”, WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.