There's some advice from the book "Practical mod_perl" which applies to any situation with a long-running perl interpreter. It may help.

In general, growth in a perl program does not indicate a leak. Perl uses a lot of memory and will take more when it needs it and rarely give any back.

Your attempts to find the line where the memory increased may have been foiled by the fact that Perl allocates memory in buckets. It grabs a fistful of RAM at a time so you only see the increases at the times when it runs out and needs to go back for more, not at the times when it uses the memory.


In reply to Re: memory (leaks and management) by perrin
in thread memory (leaks and management) by soliplaya

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