Tuesday, May 12, 2009 11:53 AM
by
Tess
Debug Diag script for troubleshooting .NET 2.0 Memory leaks
I have put together a quick and dirty debug diag script for troubleshooting .net memory leaks. (attached to this post)
The reason I put it together was mainly to show how you can create your own debug diag scripts but feel free to use it to troubleshoot memory leaks, knowing that it does string parsing on the output so it is a bit prone to errors if sos changes output formats.
NOTE: This script will only work on .NET 2.0 x86 memory dumps
Mourad recently published a whitepaper on debug diag that talks about how to use it for various scenarios and he also explains how to create some basic scripts and I used this as my starting point.
My script loads up sos from the framework directory and goes through the following steps.
1. Print .NET Framework Version
2. Print information on the GC (Garbage Collector) heaps and report the amount of memory used for .NET objects
3. Print and categorize the 40 most memory consuming object types (so that you can spot which object types you might be leaking or using a lot of)
4. Print the finalizequeue so that you can see what objects on the heap have finalizers to verify that they are neccessary. It also reports potential blocking of the finalizer including the finalizer stack so that you can see if/why your finalizer thread is blocked.
5. Print objects on the large object heap
6. Determine and report the size of the cache for each asp.net application in the process
7. Report the number of active sessions in the process
8. Check if the process was in a GC when the dump was collected as this may invalidate heap/object information
How to use the script
1. Install debug diag 1.1 from http://www.microsoft.com/DOWNLOADS/details.aspx?FamilyID=28bd5941-c458-46f1-b24d-f60151d875a3&displaylang=en
2. Unzip the attached file and put the DotNetMemoryAnalysis.asp file in the C:\Program Files (x86)\DebugDiag\Scripts directory (or your debugdiag/scripts directory if you installed it somewhere else)
This will add a new analysis script to the Advanced Analysis tab in debug diag:
2. Generate a memory dump when memory usage is high. With debug diag you can do this by going into the processes tab, right-click on the process and select “Create Full Userdump”
3. In the Tools/Options & Settings menu, set the “Symbol Search Path For Analysis” to SRV*c:\websymbols*http://msdl.microsoft.com/download/symbols
4. In the Advanced Analysis tab, select Add Data Files, add your memory dump, select the DotNetMemoryAnalysis.asp script and click Start Analysis (note that some of the steps may take a while depending on the size of the dump). If you get an InStr exception that means that you are either trying to debug a 64 bit dump or the sos version in your framework directory is not matching up to the framework version of the dump (i.e. the proper mscordacwks symbol could not be found)
Once the analysis is done you will be presented with a mhtm file containing the report.
Sample report:
Here is a sample report generated for a dump taken for Lab 3 where the finalizer is blocked because of some bad code in the destructor for the Link object.
For this example we can see already from the analysis summary that something is fishy with the finalizer, and in the finalizer section we can also see the finalizer stack.
Scrolling down to the 40 most memory consuming object types we find a lot of Link/Link_aspx and System.Web.UI… objects, so in this case the report is pretty much straight on. In other cases it might be a bit less obvious but hopefully the suggested articles help narrow it down.
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Analysis Summary |
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| Type |
Description |
Recommendation |
Warning |
Number of objects ready for finalization: 35765
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This is an indication that your finalizer thread may be blocked. Look at finalizequeue info and finalizer stack to determine why/if the finalizer is blocked |
Information |
Cache Size: 1397928 Bytes
This includes memory for objects stored in in-process sessions |
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Information |
Number of active in-process sessions: 4000 |
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Information |
GC Heap usage: 768160596 Bytes
Common issues for high .NET Memory usage includes: Blocked finalizers, lots of memory in cache/sessions, lots of large objects and memory rooted in statics You should also revivew the most memory consuming objects. |
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Analysis Details |
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PID-5476__W3WP.EXE_-DefaultAppPool-__full_1964_2009-05-07_13-58-54-165_1564.dmp
| Type of Analysis Performed |
.NET Memory Analysis |
| Machine Name |
PRATHER |
| Operating System |
Windows Server 2003 Service Pack 2 |
| Number Of Processors |
2 |
| Process ID |
5476 |
| Process Image |
C:\WINDOWS\SysWOW64\inetsrv\w3wp.exe |
| System Up-Time |
10 day(s) 05:48:21 |
| Process Up-Time |
8 day(s) 23:15:06 |
Table of contents.NET Framework Version .NET GC Heap Information 40 most memory consuming .NET object types .NET Finalizer Queue Large Object Heap Cache
.NET Version2.0.50727.3053 retail Server mode with 2 gc heaps SOS Version: 2.0.50727.3053 retail build
.NET GC Heap InformationNumber of GC Heaps: 2 ------------------------------ Heap 0 (001aa5c0) generation 0 starts at 0x39d0c6a8 generation 1 starts at 0x39005c0c generation 2 starts at 0x02d10038 ephemeral segment allocation context: none segment begin allocated size 02d10000 02d10038 06cf1098 0x03fe1060(66981984) 16fd0000 16fd0038 1afca200 0x03ffa1c8(67084744) 1efd0000 1efd0038 22fc61f0 0x03ff61b8(67068344) 26fd0000 26fd0038 2afc1338 0x03ff1300(67048192) 2efd0000 2efd0038 32e7c290 0x03eac258(65716824) 36fd0000 36fd0038 3a0e7734 0x031176fc(51476220) Large object heap starts at 0x0ad10038 segment begin allocated size 0ad10000 0ad10038 0ad23b78 0x00013b40(80704) Heap Size 0x16f99b74(385457012) ------------------------------ Heap 1 (001ab888) generation 0 starts at 0x3de2921c generation 1 starts at 0x3d17acc8 generation 2 starts at 0x06d10038 ephemeral segment allocation context: none segment begin allocated size 06d10000 06d10038 0acfe46c 0x03fee434(67036212) 1afd0000 1afd0038 1efaba04 0x03fdb9cc(66959820) 22fd0000 22fd0038 26fa3d7c 0x03fd3d44(66927940) 2afd0000 2afd0038 2efa58d8 0x03fd58a0(66934944) 32fd0000 32fd0038 36c42aa8 0x03c72a70(63384176) 3afd0000 3afd0038 3e0e39b4 0x0311397c(51460476) Large object heap starts at 0x0cd10038 segment begin allocated size 0cd10000 0cd10038 0cd10048 0x00000010(16) Heap Size 0x16cf97e0(382703584) ------------------------------ GC Heap Size 0x2dc93354(768160596)
More information: Compare the total GC Heap size to the number of private bytes in the process when the dump was taken (or the dump size on disk) to determine if most of your memory is on the .NET GC Heap
In the !eeheap -gc output above you can also see if most of your .NET GC memory is on the small object heaps or on the large object heap (LOH) (objects over 85000 bytes). If you see that most of your memory is on the LOH, look at the LOH output to see what those objects are.
If the GC Heap is relatively small, run debug diag with leaktracking to track native leaks and analyze the dump with the MemoryAnalysis script instead. See debug diag help for more information about this.
Related posts: I have a memory leak!!! What do i do? (defining the "where") Are you really leaking .NET Memory?
40 most memory consuming .NET object typesMT Num items Tot. size Type 66108d24 33 8316 System.Web.UI.RenderStyle[] 6614e4dc 35 8540 System.Web.Hosting.ISAPIWorkerRequestInProcForIIS6 79323510 363 8712 System.Collections.Stack+StackEnumerator 7932e7d0 185 8880 System.Signature 79331a6c 472 9440 System.RuntimeType 648c710c 636 10176 System.Configuration.PropertySourceInfo 66108884 33 10956 System.Web.UI.HtmlTextWriter+RenderAttribute[] 7a5eca44 576 11520 System.Collections.Specialized.HybridDictionary 79304314 194 11640 System.Reflection.ParameterInfo 7932fba8 215 12040 System.Reflection.RuntimeMethodInfo 0fbf1b90 35 13020 ASP.links_aspx 661087a0 593 14232 System.Web.UI.ControlCollection+ControlCollectionEnumerator 66107950 941 15056 System.Web.UI.Pair 648c8fa0 299 15548 System.Configuration.ConfigurationProperty 79329b58 496 15872 System.EventHandler 7933151c 232 16400 System.Char[] 7a5ecbc0 829 16580 System.Collections.Specialized.ListDictionary+DictionaryNode 648c91d4 353 16944 System.Configuration.ConfigurationValues 66113834 759 18216 System.Web.UI.Html32TextWriter+FontStackItem 79332a88 243 18484 System.Int32[] 79332b38 1627 19524 System.Int32 7a5e7dbc 1329 21264 System.Collections.Specialized.NameObjectCollectionBase+NameObjectEntry 66106ba4 315 21420 System.Web.UI.DataBoundLiteralControl 66101cd0 630 22680 System.Web.UI.ControlCollection 66101934 379 22740 System.Web.UI.LiteralControl 648c9414 1147 22940 System.Configuration.ConfigurationValue 7933335c 232 26484 System.Byte[] 661068d4 385 35420 System.Web.UI.WebControls.DataListItem 66101680 945 41580 System.Web.UI.Control+OccasionalFields 7933291c 1869 44856 System.Collections.ArrayList 79332f40 910 50960 System.Collections.Hashtable 661493a4 33 51084 System.Web.Caching.ExpiresEntry[] 6611b000 4000 192000 System.Web.SessionState.InProcSessionState 793040bc 4141 284380 System.Object[] 66148eb0 4026 289872 System.Web.Caching.CacheEntry 7933303c 948 349560 System.Collections.Hashtable+bucket[] 0fbf1edc 35999 575984 Link 79330a28 36165 723300 System.Text.StringBuilder 001a9a30 6028 43134680 Free 793308ec 47536 721577968 System.String Total 168583 objects´
| Color |
Object type |
| Red |
System.Web.UI... objects |
| Blue |
System.Data... objects |
| Green |
System.XML... objects |
| Purple |
Custom objects |
More Information For more information on how to read !dumpheap -stat output, see !dumpheap -stat explained
To get info on how to dig deeper into the !dumpheap -stat output see ASP.NET Memory Investigation
Finalizer queueSyncBlocks to be cleaned up: 0 MTA Interfaces to be released: 0 STA Interfaces to be released: 0 ---------------------------------- ------------------------------ Heap 0 generation 0 has 370 finalizable objects (107a9a9c->107aa064) generation 1 has 12 finalizable objects (107a9a6c->107a9a9c) generation 2 has 47 finalizable objects (107a99b0->107a9a6c) Ready for finalization 17909 objects (107aa064->107bb838) ------------------------------ Heap 1 generation 0 has 247 finalizable objects (107bcb40->107bcf1c) generation 1 has 4 finalizable objects (107bcb30->107bcb40) generation 2 has 36 finalizable objects (107bcaa0->107bcb30) Ready for finalization 17856 objects (107bcf1c->107ce61c) Statistics: MT Count TotalSize Class Name 6614bbc0 1 12 System.Web.Configuration.ImpersonateTokenRef 79334808 1 20 Microsoft.Win32.SafeHandles.SafeFileMappingHandle 793347b0 1 20 Microsoft.Win32.SafeHandles.SafeViewOfFileHandle 79317fac 1 20 Microsoft.Win32.SafeHandles.SafeTokenHandle 66147c6c 1 20 System.Web.PerfInstanceDataHandle 6614b038 1 32 System.Web.Compilation.CompilationMutex 7932335c 2 40 System.Security.Cryptography.SafeProvHandle 6612f6d0 2 56 System.Web.Security.FileSecurityDescriptorWrapper 79317928 3 60 Microsoft.Win32.SafeHandles.SafeWaitHandle 79321cd0 2 120 System.Runtime.Remoting.Contexts.Context 7932a0f4 3 132 System.Threading.ReaderWriterLock 79316fb0 7 168 System.Threading.TimerBase 7932b108 14 280 Microsoft.Win32.SafeHandles.SafeRegistryHandle 661483d8 10 280 System.Web.DirMonCompletion 7932a09c 31 496 System.WeakReference 66151384 70 1680 System.Web.HttpResponseUnmanagedBufferElement 66148130 96 1920 System.Web.ApplicationImpersonationContext 66151404 100 2000 System.Web.ClientImpersonationContext 66103cb4 68 2992 System.Web.UI.WebControls.TableStyle 79330ec0 78 4368 System.Threading.Thread 0fbf1edc 35989 575824 Link Total 36481 objects
More Information: !finalizequeue will show all the objects on the heap that have finalizer methods, and have yet not been disposed of. It is a good idea to look through this list and verify that all your "custom" objects on this list really need finalizers/destructors, as having unneccesary finalizers will lead to higher memory consumption and a potential for blocked finalizers.
Related posts: Unblock my finalizer To dispose or not to dispose, that's the 1 GB question
As the number of finalizable objects is more than 0, please check the finalizer thread to see if it is blocked or active
Finalizer Thread
OS Thread Id: 0x1534 (14) ESP EIP 0286f8f4 7d61ccc6 [HelperMethodFrame: 0286f8f4] System.Threading.Thread.SleepInternal(Int32) 0286f948 79299225 System.Threading.Thread.Sleep(Int32) 0286f94c 0fbe2262 Link.Finalize() 0286fc1c 79f8df9a [ContextTransitionFrame: 0286fc1c] 0286fcec 79f8df9a [GCFrame: 0286fcec]
Objects on the Large Object Heap------------------------------ Heap 0 Address MT Size total 0 objects ------------------------------ Heap 1 Address MT Size total 0 objects ------------------------------ total 0 objects Statistics: MT Count TotalSize Class Name Total 0 objects
More information: A high amount of large objects (strings and arrays over 85000 bytes) can lead to GC Heap fragmentation and thus higher memory usage in your application. Look through the large objects, to dig deeper you can run !do on the object address in windbg, to see if these objects are expected and if you can minimize their usage in any way, by caching etc. Common reasons for high amounts of large objects are large viewstate and Dataset serialization
Size of Web Caches in the processsizeof(06d1cd2c) = 1397928 ( 0x1554a8) bytes (System.Web.Caching.Cache)
More information: There is one System.Web.Caching.Cache object referencing all cached objects, per web application In-Proc session state is stored in the cache, so the size of all session vars is also included in the size of the cache for the specific application
Related articles How much are you caching UI objects in session scope
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Script Summary |
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| Script Name |
Status |
Error Code |
Error Source |
Error Description |
Source Line |
| DotNetMemoryAnalysis.asp |
Completed |
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Have fun,
Tess