What's happening is that perl's allocated lots of little chunks of memory. When perl exits, it needs to go through and hand them all back to the system like a well-behaved potentially embedded program should. Unfortunately the afflicted versions of libc, when presented with a zillion frees, seem to go insane managing its free list, with the performance problems you've noted. (This can also happen if you free up a lot of little chunks of memory in the middle of your program, in which case you'll get a noticeable pause)
In reply to Re: Exiting takes a looong time
by Elian
in thread Exiting takes a looong time
by Anonymous Monk
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