Thanks In Advance
Anand
Does this information help you?
http://www.daimi.au.dk/~kasperd/comp.os.linux.development.faq.html#memleak
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> Does this information help you?
> http://www.daimi.au.dk/~kasperd/comp.os.linux.development.faq.html#memleak
That's ridiculously helpful.
But it ignores the fact that all that leaking memory must be going
somewhere. Look for soggy patches under the cpu on the case. Bits have
a positive dielectric constant which reacts with the negative ions in
the lattice of crystalline microzones in the aluminium alloy in the case.
Loking along the light you should be able to see something amiss if it
is a regularly recurring problem.
Other people will give you silly advice on occasions - follow your own
feelings on the matter. If you suspect that something is stealing away
precious memory, it likely is so. In my experience, the surest course
is usually to take time out to grow a kid brother who is smarter than
you. You can trust what family say.
And if you get a jury service note for the RIAA case, accept.
(:Peter:)
Nice text.
Doesn't mention my favorite memory debugger technique, however:
dmalloc - Debug memory allocation library
Things like valgrind and electric-fence are too heavyweight for my
taste. Dmalloc just links in a new malloc library.
Peter
The FAQ entry was about kernel memory leaks. But maybe I should
include a list of memory leak debuging utilities for kernel and
user space. Are there other utilities which should be included
in such a list?
Thanks & Regards
Anand
> Do you have links with more information?
mpatrol will help you
http://www.cbmamiga.demon.co.uk/mpatrol/
Regards,
Sagar