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Bug #15916
closedMemory leak in Regexp literal interpolation
Bug #15916:
Memory leak in Regexp literal interpolation
Status:
Closed
Assignee:
-
Target version:
-
ruby -v:
ruby 2.6.3p62 (2019-04-16 revision 67580) [x86_64-linux]
Description
When interpolating a string inside a Regexp literal, if the string contains a multibyte character loaded from a file (not sure if this covers all the cases, but this is what triggers it for me), Ruby leaks memory.
The code below reproduces the problem, while outputting the process memory usage as it rises (get_process_mem gem is required).
Ways to avoid the memory leak (although I don't know why) include:
- Using the string literal to define
PATTERNdirectly (Not loading it from a file) - Using
Regexp.newinstead of a literal interpolation (/#{...}/) - Shortening the string to just a few characters (maybe small enough to fit inside a single RVALUE?)
require 'get_process_mem'
str = "String that doesn't fit into a single RVALUE, with a multibyte char:" + 160.chr(Encoding::UTF_8)
File.write('weirdstring.txt', str)
pattern = File.read("weirdstring.txt")
loop do
print "Running... "
100_000.times { /#{pattern}/i }
puts " process mem: #{GetProcessMem.new.mb.to_i}MB"
end
Expected Result:
Constant memory usage (avoiding the leak produces constant memory usage between 10-20MB)
Actual Result:
Continual memory growth (it only takes 60 seconds or so to consume 500MB)
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