Growing and leaking are not the same thing. A perl program can use more memory after running a while even if nothing is wrong. For example, if you load a 10MB file into a scalar, that scalar will hang onto that memory, even if it goes out of scope. You would have to explicitly undef it to get the memory back.

So, your real question is "How can I make my program use less memory?" There are some answers to that in general terms in the Perl documentation and other places. For specific advice, try to narrow down a small section that grows a lot over time, and post it here for help.


In reply to Re: Tracking down memory leaks by perrin
in thread Tracking down memory leaks by scain

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