2013/10/24 Kristján Valur Jónsson <kristjan at ccpgames.com>: > > Now, I would personally not truncate the stack, because I can afford the memory, > but even if I would, for example, to hide a bunch of detail, I would want to throw away > the _lower_ detals of the stack. It is unimportant to me to know if memory was > allocated in > ...;itertools.py;logging.py;stringutil.py > but more important to know that it was allocated in > main.py;databaseengine.py;enginesettings.py;... Well, maybe to you, but if you look at valgrind for example, it keeps the top of the stack: and it makes a lot of sense to me, since otherwise you won't be able to find where the leak occurred. Anyway, since the stack depth is a tunable parameter, this shouldn't be an issue in practice: just save the whole stack. 2013/10/24 MRAB <python at mrabarnett.plus.com>: > > When I was looking for memory leaks in the regex module I simply wrote all > of the allocations, reallocations and deallocations to a log file and then > parsed it afterwards using a Python script. Simple, but effective. We've all done that ;-) > 1) really, all that is required in terms of data is the traceback.get_traces() function. Further, it _need_ not return addresses since they are not required for analysis. It is sufficient for it to return a list of (traceback, size, count) tuples. Sure. Since the beginning, I'm also leaning towards a minimal API, and let third-party tools do the analysis. It makes a lot of sense, since some people will want just basic snapshot information, some others will want to compute various statistics, some others will want to display the result in a GUI... But OTOT, it would be too bad not to ship the stdlib with a basic tool to process data, to as to make it usable out-of-the box. And in this regard, we should probably mimick what's done for CPU profiling: there are both low-level profiling data gathering infrastructure (profile and cProfile), but there's also a pstats.Stats class allowing basic operations/display on this raw data. That's IMO a reasonable balance. cf
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