Is it safe to call [self <>] inside viewDidUnload? - iphone

Is it safe to do something like:
- (void) viewDidUnload {
[self cleanup] ;
[super viewDidUnload];
}
Because I hear things such as "self" may not even exist in a non-corrupt form when the view is unloading, hence it may be unsafe. Is it safe?

It's totally safe. viewDidUnload gets called in low memory situations when the view controller has temporarily deallocated the view to conserve memory. You just don't want to do anything in there that would access your controller's view property, as that would cause the controller to lazy-load the view again. Other than that, calling methods on self in viewDidLoad is totally safe.
You may be thinking of the dealloc method. I've seen people assert that you shouldn't call methods on self in your init or dealloc methods because your object may be in a partially initialized/released state. I guess the fear is that someone will try to modify or override the method you're calling without realizing that it's being called on a partially-formed object. This risk is increased if you don't set your released properties to nil in dealloc.

Related

View controller release before delegate return

I have a problem. My view controller (ViewController) implement a delegate method of a object (DataPuller, data get from the internet). DataPuller will retrieve data on the internet without blocking user interaction with the view. But when I navigate between screen, in some cases, that ViewController release before DataPuller return the list of objects. The DataPuller return, it checks:
if (delegate && [delegate respondsToSelector:#selector(getCommentDidDownloadFinish:)]) {
[self.delegate performSelector:#selector(getCommentDidDownloadFinish:) withObject:self];
}
And the application crash here because ViewController release, it becomes a zombie object. Does anyone have this problem before and how to solve it? I think another way is using NSNotification, but I wonder any other better solutions. Any ideas, solutions are welcomes. Thanks.
Your view controller must remove itself as the DataPuller delegate at some point. Typicially, this is handled in the dealloc method:
- (void)dealloc {
dataPuller.delegate = nil;
[dataPuller release];
[super dealloc];
}
You may also decide to do this in -viewDidUnload or -viewDidDisappear:.
Delegation (usually) implies some sort of ownership - i.e., if you make an object a delegate of another object, usually the delegate object holds a strong reference (i.e., retains) the delegating object.
As an example, a UITableViewController is the delegate of its UITableView. This is okay, because the controller retains the tableview through the "view" property.
If your design does not allow ownership, use notifications, like you already suggested. As a bonus, notifications can signal multiple listeners if you would ever need that.
Don't forget to remove your observer in the dealloc of the view controller!

didReceiveMemoryWarning, viewDidUnload and dealloc

I've looked through lots of posts, my books and Apple Developer and gleaned most of the understanding I need on use of these. I would be really grateful if some kind person could confirm that I've got it right (or correct me) and also answer the two questions.
Many thanks,
Chris.
Order of Messages
Generally, the messages will appear in the following order:
didReceiveMemoryWarning
viewDidUnload (which can be caused by 1) - obviously only applies to View Controller Classes.
dealloc
didReceiveMemoryWarning
Called when the system is low on memory.
By default, view controllers are registered for memory warning notifications and within the template method, the call to [super didReceiveMemoryWarning] releases the view if it doesn't have a superview, which is a way of checking whether the view is visible or not. It releases the view by setting its property to nil.
Action - Release anything you do not need, likely to be undoing what you might have set up in viewDidLoad. Do not release UI elements as these should be released by viewDidUnload.
Question1 - It seems that this will be called even if the View is visible, so its difficult to see what you could safely release. It would be really helpful to understand this and some examples of what could be released.
viewDidUnload
Called whenever a non visible View Controller's View property is set to nil, either manually or most commonly through didReceiveMemoryWarning.
The viewDidUnload method is there so that you can:
- clean up anything else you would like, to save extra memory or
- if you've retained some IBOutlets, to help free up memory that wouldn't otherwise be released by the view being unloaded.
Action - generally any IBOutlets you release in dealloc, should also be released (and references set to nil) in this method. Note that if the properties are set to retain, then setting them to nil will also release them.
dealloc
Called when the view controller object is de-allocated, which it will be when the retain count drops to zero.
Action - release all objects that have been retained by the class, including but not limited to all properties with a retain or copy.
Popping View Controllers and Memory
Question 2 - Does popping a view remove it from memory?
Some corrections and suggestions:
didReceiveMemoryWarning practices
As you said, the controller's default implementation of didReceiveMemoryWarning releases its view if it is 'safe to do so'. While it's not clear from Apple's documents what 'safe to do so' means, it is generally recognized as it has no superview (thus there is no way that the view is currently visible), and its loadView method can rebuild the entire view without problems.
The best practice when you override didReceiveMemoryWarning is, not to try releasing any view objects at all. Just release your custom data, if it is no longer necessary. Regarding views, just let the superclass's implementation deal with them.
Sometimes, however, the necessity of the data may depend on the state of your view. In most cases, those custom data is set in viewDidLoad method. In these cases, 'safe to release custom data' means that you know that loadView and viewDidLoad will be invoked before the view controller uses the custom data again.
Therefore, in your didReceiveMemoryWarning, call the superclass implementation first, and if its view is unloaded, then release the custom data because you know that loadView and viewDidLoad will be invoked again for sure. For example,
- (void)didReceiveMemoryWarning {
/* This is the view controller's method */
[super didReceiveMemoryWarning];
if (![self isViewLoaded]) {
/* release your custom data which will be rebuilt in loadView or viewDidLoad */
}
}
Be careful not to use self.view == nil, because self.view assumes that the view is needed for someone and will immediately load the view again.
viewDidUnload method
viewDidUnload is called when the view controller unloaded the view due to a memory warning. For example, if you remove the view from the superview and set the view property of the controller to nil, viewDidUnload method will not be invoked. A subtle point is that even if the view of a view controller is already released and set to nil by the time the controller receives didReceiveMemoryWarning, so actually there is no view to unload for the controller, viewDidUnload will be invoked if you call the superclass's implementation of didReceiveMemoryWarning.
That's why it's not a good practice to manually set the view property of a view controller to nil. If you do, you may better send a viewDidUnload message as well. I guess your understanding of viewDidUnload is more desirable, but apparently it's not the current behavior.
Popping view controllers
If you mean 'removing from the superview' by 'popping', it does decrease the retain count of the view, but not necessarily deallocate it.
If you mean popping out from a UINavigationController, it actually decrease the retain count of the view controller itself. If the view controller is not retained by another object, it will be deallocated, desirably with its view. As I explained, viewDidUnload will not be invoked this time.
Others...
Technically, the retain count may not go down to zero. The object is more likely to be just deallocated without setting the count to zero beforehand.
Just to make sure, the view controller itself is normally not deallocated by default behaviors due to the memory warning.
didReceiveMemoryWarning
...
Action - Release anything you do not need, likely to be undoing what you might have set up in viewDidLoad.
This is wrong. Anything that you recreate in viewDidLoad should be released (and set to nil) in viewDidUnload. As you mention below, didReceiveMemoryWarning is also called when the view is visible. In didReceiveMemoryWarning, you should release stuff like caches or other view controllers you are holding on to that can be recreated lazily the next time they are required (i.e., by implementing their getter manually).
viewDidUnload
...
Action - generally any IBOutlets you release in dealloc, should also be released (and references set to nil) in this method. Note that if the properties are set to retain, then setting them to nil will also release them.
Correct. Generally, everything you create in viewDidLoad and all IBOutlets that are declared as retain should be released and set to nil here.
dealloc
...
Action - release all objects that have been retained by the class, including but not limited to all properties with a retain or copy.
Correct. It's worth noting that this includes all objects you handle in viewDidUnload because the latter is not implicitly called in the dealloc process (AFAIK, not entirely sure). That's why it is essential to set all releases objects to nil in viewDidUnload because otherwise you risk releasing something twice (first in viewDidUnload, then again in dealloc; if you set the pointer to nil, the release call in dealloc will have no effect).
Popping View Controllers and Memory
Question 2 - Does popping a view remove it from memory?
Not necessarily. That is an implementation detail that you should not be concerned about. Whatever the current practice is, Apple could change it in the next release.
Just to update this thread to make it iOS6-relevant:
viewDidUnload and viewWillUnload were deprecated in iOS6. These methods are never called.
For this and other deprecated methods, see: http://developer.apple.com/library/ios/#documentation/uikit/reference/UIViewController_Class/DeprecationAppendix/AppendixADeprecatedAPI.html
Form iOS 6 onwards, how we can check whether the view loaded again. Since "viewDidUnload" is deprecated. Are you sure "loadView" and "viewDidload" will call if the view is getting removed after "didReceiveMemoryWarning" warning.

iOS SDK - dealloc implementation - Release child views first?

I am finishing up an iPad application, and for me, that means filling in all of the dealloc methods in my classes.
I have many views in my nib and most of them contain subviews (i.e. UIViews, UILabels, etc.). Should I release the child views before releasing the parent? If the parent view is released, will its child views be released, as well?
Sample:
-(void)dealloc
{
[super dealloc];
[childView release]; // Do I need this if I use the next line?
[parentView release]; // Will this perform the line above?
}
Both childView and parentView are properties of my view controller. Both have been retained.
Anything that you have retained (whether explicitly or through a retained property) needs to be released for the memory management to be balanced.
Also, you should invoke [super dealloc] at the end of your dealloc implementation, not the beginning (for instance, because you might depend on superclass resources still being available at the time).
By the way, saving your dealloc-writing until you're finishing up work on the app is a backwards way to go. I know it seems like house-cleaning work, but the fact is until you're managing memory properly, you're going to have a very skewed view of how your app really performs.
Ideally you should write your dealloc calls as you write your #synthesize statements. In other words, you add a property to your class, you set it up as a retained property, you write its #synthesize and -release code. That way you know your memory management is basically clean (I mean, at the class property level anyway) and you can code with confidence.
Since you specified that you have subviews from a NIB, it sounds like you also may need to pay close attention to the viewDidUnload method.
Any views which are automatically allocated from the nib you can implicitly release by setting the outlet to nil. For example:
- (void)viewDidUnload {
[super viewDidUnload];
self.subviewOutletOne = nil;
self.subviewOutletTwo = nil;
}
Then for any objects which you explicitly retain, you release them in the dealloc method like you are planning to do:
- (void)dealloc {
[myDataArray release];
[coolAnimatedImage release];
[myCustomSubview release];
[super dealloc];
}
Also be sure to check out the LEAKS instrument. This is a random tutorial for using the built in leak analysis tool. There may be others / better ones. It can a pain to get up and running the first time but is completely worth it.

What exactly must I do in viewDidUnload?

I tend to release my stuff in -dealloc, and now iPhone OS 3.0 introduced this funny -viewDidUnload method, where they say:
// Release any retained subviews of
the main view. // e.g. self.myOutlet
= nil;
So -viewDidUnload seems to get called when the view of the view controller has been kicked off from memory. And if I have subviews attached to the main view of the view controller, I have to release that stuff only HERE, but not in -dealloc as well?
That's confusing. Also, what if -dealloc causes the view to be unloaded (released)? Then again, it will call -viewDidUnload?
I do realize the difference, that -viewDidUnload is just for the case where the view itself gets killed, but the view controller stays in memory. And -dealloc is for the case where the whole thing goes to trash.
Maybe someone can clear up the confusion.
The intent here is to "balance out" your subview management. Anything that you create in viewDidLoad should be released in viewDidUnload. This makes it easier to keep track of what should be released where. In most cases, your dealloc method is a mirror-image of your init method, and your viewDidUnload will be a mirror image of your viewDidLoad method.
As you pointed out, the viewDid... methods are to be used when the view itself is loaded and unloaded. This permits a usage pattern in which the view controller remains loaded in memory, but the view itself can be loaded and unloaded as required:
init
viewDidLoad
viewDidUnload
viewDidLoad
viewDidUnload
...
dealloc
Of course, it doesn't hurt to release things in your dealloc method as well, as long as you set them to nil when you release them in viewDidUnload.
The following quote from the Memory Management section of Apple's UIViewController documentation, describes it in more detail:
...in iPhone OS 3.0 and later, the viewDidUnload method may be a more appropriate place for most needs.
When a low-memory warning occurs, the UIViewController class purges its views if it knows it can reload or recreate them again later. If this happens, it also calls the viewDidUnload method to give your code a chance to relinquish ownership of any objects that are associated with your view hierarchy, including objects loaded with the nib file, objects created in your viewDidLoad method, and objects created lazily at runtime and added to the view hierarchy. Typically, if your view controller contains outlets (properties or raw variables that contain the IBOutlet keyword), you should use the viewDidUnload method to relinquish ownership of those outlets or any other view-related data that you no longer need.
As you say viewDidUnload will be called if self.view=nil, this generally occurs if you get memory warning. In this method you must release any subview of the mainview which can easily be created by .xib or loadView method. You should release any data object if you create them in viewDidload or loadView etc. because these methods will be called again to present view to the user, those data can be recreated easily.
When you get a memory warning usually the viewcontroller will unload it's view but itself will not be dealloc.
All that can be re-created easily should be unloaded, but not the model of the view.

When should I release objects in -(void)viewDidUnload rather than in -dealloc?

What is the -(void)viewDidUnload is good for?
Could I not just relase everything in -dealloc? If the view did unload, wouldn't -dealloc be called anyway?
In addition to what has already been indicated, I wanted to elaborate more about logic behind -viewDidUnload.
One of the most important reasons for implementing it is that UIViewController subclasses commonly also contain owning references to various subviews in the view hierarchy. These properties could have been set through IBOutlets when loading from a nib, or programmatically inside -loadView, for instance.
The additional ownership of subviews by the UIViewController means that even when its view is removed from the view hierarchy and released to save memory, through which the subviews are also released by the view, they will not actually be deallocated because the UIViewController itself still contains its own outstanding retaining references to those objects as well. Releasing the UIViewController additional ownership of these objects ensures they will be deallocated as well to free memory.
The objects that you release here are usually recreated and set again when the UIViewController view is re-loaded, either from a Nib or through an implementation of -loadView.
Also note that the UIViewController view property is nil by the time this method is called.
As the documentation says:
It is called during low-memory conditions when the view controller needs to release its view and any objects associated with that view to free up memory.
In the same situation dealloc is not called. This method is only available in OS3 and above. Dealing with the same situation in iPhone OS 2.x was a real pain!
Update July 2015: It should be noted that viewDidUnload was deprecated in iOS 6 because "Views are no longer purged under low-memory conditions and so this method is never called." So, the modern advice is not to worry about it and use dealloc.
This is because you will typically set the #property as "(nonatomic, retain)" and as such the setter that is created for you releases the current object and then retains the argument i.e.
self.property = nil;
...does something along the lines of:
[property release];
property = [nil retain];
Therefore you are killing two birds with one stone: memory management (releasing the existing object) and assigning the pointer to nil (since sending any message to a nil pointer will return nil).
Hope that helps.
Remember that viewDidUnload is a method in the view controller, not in the view. The view's dealloc method will get called when the view unloads, but the view controller's dealloc method may not be called until later.
If you get a low memory warning and your view isn't showing, which will happen for instance about any time you use a UIImagePickerController to let the user take a picture, your view will get unloaded and will need to get reloaded after that.
Conclusion:
View Controllers have a view property. Typically a nib or piece of code adds other views to this view. This happens often inside a -viewDidLoad method, like this:
- (void)viewDidLoad {
[super viewDidLoad];
[self createManyViewsAndAddThemToSelfDotView];
}
in addition, a nib file may create a button and append it to the view controller's view.
On iPhone OS 2.2, when -didReceiveMemoryWarning was invoked from the system, you had to release something to free up memory. You could release the whole view controller's view if that made sense. Or just big memory-consuming contents in it.
- (void)didReceiveMemoryWarning {
[super didReceiveMemoryWarning]; // Releases the view if it doesn't have a superview
// Release anything that's not essential, such as cached data
}
Now, in the new OS 3.0, there is an -viewDidUnload method, which will be invoked from the system when the view has been unloaded because of low memory (please correct me: when exactly does this get called?)
-viewDidUnload is used to release all objects that were owned both by the view controller itself and the view. The reason: If a view controller holds references to childs of the view, i.e. a button, the referenced child views will not get released, because their retain count is >= 1. After they are released in -viewDidUnload, they can get freed up from memory.
Apple deprecated viewWillUnload, now you shoud use didReceiveMemoryWarning or dealloc to release your objetcs.
In iOS 6, the viewWillUnload and viewDidUnload methods of
UIViewController are now deprecated. If you were using these methods
to release data, use the didReceiveMemoryWarning method instead. You
can also use this method to release references to the view
controller’s view if it is not being used. You would need to test that
the view is not in a window before doing this.
If the view controller is popped from the navigation controller stack and is not retained anywhere else, it will be deallocated, and dealloc will be called instead of viewDidUnload. You should release the views created in loadView in dealloc, but it is not necessary to set the variables to nil, because soon after dealloc is called the variables will no longer exist.
You can release any subviews you hold on to, for example that UIImageView you retained in your loadView method, or better yet the image that was on that UIImageView.