I am struggling with a memory leak associated with a ListView. I have created the following small program which exhibits this behavior.
What I do is create 2 LinearLayouts. The first has a Button and a GListView control. The code for GListView is below, but it just sub-classes ListView, and implements the ListAdapter interface. When the GListView is created, it sets it's adapter to itself.
Now when you press the button I switch to the second LinearLayout. This layout has only a single button. When you press this button, I create a new 1st layout with a new GListView and set it as the active view.
Run the program, and switch between the two views 20 times. Then bring up the DDMS and force a garbage collection. Then Dump the memory, and use the Memory Analyzer and you will find 21 GListView objects remaining. That is, the 20 GListViews that are not longer connected to anything have NOT been freed.
If I do a memory dump and take a look at one of the GListViews that should have been recycled, and list the incomming references using the Memory Analyzer, I get the following:
Class Name | Shallow Heap | Retained Heap
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
com.gabysoft.memoryleak.GListView @ 0x43e72270 Unknown | 672 | 3,528
|- host android.view.View$ScrollabilityCache @ 0x43e72560 | 80 | 584
|- this$0 android.widget.AbsListView$RecycleBin @ 0开发者_运维问答x43e72830 | 40 | 160
|- mCallback android.graphics.drawable.StateListDrawable @ 0x43e728a8 | 64 | 1,464
|- this$0 android.widget.AdapterView$AdapterDataSetObserver @ 0x43e730b8| 16 | 16
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Now if I comment out the 'setAdapter(this)' function in the GListView constructor and repeat the above, I find that there is only 1 GListView that remains. That is, in this case, all of the unused GListViews have been properly recycled.
Someone suggested that I create a private class within my GListView to handle the ListAdapter interface, and I tried that, but it did not help. I have also tried creating a completely separate public class to handle the ListAdapter, but, alas, that doesn't seem to work either.
Surely there is some way to make these objects go away when they are no longer used anywhere. (Isn't that what garbage collection is all about?)
Any help would be appreciated. I am really pulling my hair out on this one.
Thanks.
/*
* Activity
*/
package com.gabysoft.memoryleak;
import android.app.Activity;
import android.os.Bundle;
import android.view.View;
import android.widget.Button;
import android.widget.LinearLayout;
import android.widget.ListView;
public class MemoryLeak extends Activity implements android.view.View.OnClickListener
{
LinearLayout ll2;
boolean page2 = false;
private LinearLayout CreateLayout()
{
LinearLayout ll = new LinearLayout(this);
Button btn1 = new Button(this);
ListView lv = new GListView(this);
btn1.setText("Press");
btn1.setLayoutParams(new LinearLayout.LayoutParams(100, 40));
btn1.setOnClickListener(this);
ll.addView(btn1);
ll.addView(lv);
return(ll);
}
/** Called when the activity is first created. */
@Override
public void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState)
{
super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);
CreateLayout();
LinearLayout ll = CreateLayout();
ll2 = new LinearLayout(this);
Button btn2 = new Button(this);
btn2.setText("Back");
btn2.setLayoutParams(new LinearLayout.LayoutParams(100, 40));
btn2.setOnClickListener(this);
ll2.addView(btn2);
setContentView(ll);
}
@Override
public void onClick(View v)
{
if (page2)
{
LinearLayout ll = CreateLayout();
setContentView(ll);
page2 = false;
}
else
{
setContentView(ll2);
page2 = true;
}
}
}
/*
* GListView
*/
package com.gabysoft.memoryleak;
import android.content.Context;
import android.database.DataSetObserver;
import android.view.View;
import android.view.ViewGroup;
import android.widget.AdapterView;
import android.widget.ListAdapter;
import android.widget.ListView;
import android.widget.TextView;
public class GListView extends ListView implements ListAdapter
{
Context m_context;
DataSetObserver m_observer = null;
public GListView(Context context)
{
super(context);
m_context = context;
setAdapter(this);
setChoiceMode(CHOICE_MODE_SINGLE);
}
/*
* ListAdapter
*/
@Override
public boolean areAllItemsEnabled()
{
return true;
}
@Override
public boolean isEnabled(int position)
{
return true;
}
@Override
public int getCount()
{
return(0);
}
@Override
public Object getItem(int position)
{
return null;
}
@Override
public long getItemId(int position)
{
return(position);
}
@Override
public int getItemViewType(int position)
{
return 0;
}
@Override
public View getView(int position, View convertView, ViewGroup parent)
{
TextView tv = new TextView(m_context);
tv.setText("Item");
return(tv);
}
@Override
public int getViewTypeCount()
{
return 1;
}
@Override
public boolean hasStableIds()
{
return false;
}
@Override
public boolean isEmpty()
{
return false;
}
@Override
public void registerDataSetObserver(DataSetObserver observer)
{
m_observer = observer;
}
@Override
public void unregisterDataSetObserver(DataSetObserver observer)
{
m_observer = null;
}
}
Your GListView
objects are being garbage collected. Leastways, they are called with finalize()
when a manual GC is done from DDMS. Unfortunately, the DDMS HPROF file seems incompatible with my version of jhat
, and I'm not an Eclipse user so I do not have ready access to MAT.
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