Memory leak while using UIImageWriteToSavedPhotosAlbum(imageView.image,nil, nil, nil);? - iphone

Memory leak while using UIImageWriteToSavedPhotosAlbum(imageView.image,nil, nil, nil);?
how can i remove memory leak for this situation?
when i try with out this line,There is no memory leak.

The nil,nil,nil is your problem.
One of those nils, is called (SEL)completionSelector
You pass it a method selector. Inside that method, you free the memory. Apple's documentation explains this if I recall correctly. If not, I'm sure I've seen something by searching google showing how this should be done.

Remember that the Simulator may leak memory when the device does not.
Always test on the device for leaks.
Good luck!

Related

UIPickerView Causing leaks when connected via datasource

I created a test project to confirm my memory leaks:
Project file: https://dl.dropbox.com/u/3703182/PickerView.zip
Basically a UIPickerView is connected to a datasource via IB. When it's connected to a datasource, it leaks. If not, no leak. I need to use a UIPickerView for an imminent app that needs to be released ASAP, unfortunately it guarantees a crash every 2 hours because of the leak. How can I use the UIPickerView despite the memory leaks without crashing?
EDIT:
It only leaks on device, not in simulator.
That is not a leak. It's an allocation.
If it was a leak it would show a red spike in the second row.
The real test for a leak is presenting and dismissing several times over. If you can do that and show that the allocations keep rising then there is a leak. Not otherwise.
Adding my comments as answer,
Your app will not crash due to this leak since it is a very small leak caused by framework which you dont have to worry about. The screenshot shows that it is in terms of a few bytes. If your app is crashing every 2 hours, that means there is something else which is using a lot of memory. Please check if you are using anything else in your code which could cause this and update the question with your finding.
In allocation tool, make sure you are checking the live bytes section and check how much it is going up. If it stays below 15-20 MB, you dont have to worry much anyways. Check this for more details about memory usage in app. Also check this XCode Instruments Allocations: Look at Live Bytes or Overall Bytes?.
This is the Apple library that is leaking. You cannot do anything about this. It is Apple's fault.
This isn't a leak you can control, it's internal... but this is a very small amount of memory and will not crash your application. I'd be interested in seeing what this looks like an hour in... Can you provide a backtrace of the crash? That would probably better help determine the real cause of the crash.

Memory leak at performSelectorOnMainThread

I am running into some issues with the memory management on my app. The app will run properly for a while, then I will get a Received memory warning error. I then ran my app through Profile to find the memory leaks. After tracking the leaks, I got a 100% memory leak on this line:
[self performSelectorOnMainThread:#selector(loadingProgress:) withObject:[NSNumber numberWithFloat:0.0] waitUntilDone:NO];
I may be naive, but I didn't know that this could leak...
Anyone know how I can fix this?
The only possible leak is if you are over-retaining the NSNumber instance in your thread. But for that to cause a crash, you'd have to be spinning off thousands and thousands of threads, indicating a very serious problem in and of itself.
Note that the Leaks instrument shows you where the leak was allocated, not where it might have been over-retained.
Likewise, leaks only shows, well, leaks. It won't show accretion of allocations where the allocations are still referenced by the global object graph. I.e. if an object is reachable by a reference path starting at a global variable, then it isn't a leak.
Try heapshot analysis. It is very good at finding this kind of accretion over time.

Finding memory leaks using Instruments in iPhone

i have been using Instruments in Xcode to find out the memory leaks in my app. I was really impressed by this tool but was also a bit dissapointed because, it is a bit difficult to understand the way is shows the leaks. I have posted the line of code and i request you to go through it once. The instruments tool is showing a memory leak in a line where i din't even alloc the object. i have noticed similar kind of behavior at many other
lines as well. Also, memory leaks are still being shown by instruments even after releasing a object.... Can anyone help me this please.....
NSCharacterSet *trimSet=[NSCharacterSet characterSetWithCharactersInString:#"\t,\n, "];
NSString *resultString=[currentCharecterString stringByTrimmingCharactersInSet:trimSet];
Thanks and regards.
The meaning of Instruments report is that the object allocated on that line is leaked, not that this line is causing the leak.
You're probably retaining your string somewhere below.

What's the best way to fix memory leaks on the iPhone?

I'm trying to use XCode's Leaks utility to fix some memory leaks in my code. Is there a better and more understandable way to check for leaks with explanations that pinpoint the exact line and/or offer suggestions?
Another question, I'm using AVAudioRecorder in my code in one of my view controllers. Should I load the recorder in viewDidLoad or in viewWillAppear?
If you're using Snow Leopard, have you tried using the static analyzer?
As mentioned, use Static Analyzer as a first line of defense.
It will not find everything.
But here's the problem with what you are requesting of Leaks. Think about what a leak is - a leak is when you have memory, that should have been released, but it is not.
So that means you are MISSING a line of code, that could have been placed anywhere - doing the actual release at the right time. But how could the tool possibly know when something SHOULD have been released?
So instead, the tool does the next best thing. It tells you where the leaking memory was allocated, then from there it's up to you to figure out where the object travelled and when it should actually have been released.
Static Analyzer will find the cases where you should have released in a few lines of code from when you created the object. Anything else, you just need to use Leaks to get a starting point to track down when you need to release something elsewhere.

How do you detect memory leaks on iPhone?

I'm using the Leaks Instruments feature through Xcode to (try and) find memory leaks. I still haven't figured out how to use this program. I click Leaks in the program and see memory increasing as I do various things in the simulator. I have Extended Detail pane displayed. The only thing in Extended Detail pane that references my app is main. As in the main method produced by Xcode. Everything else is UIKit, Foundations, and other SDK classes I didn't write. What am I doing wrong that nothing is showing up from my app?
Before I hit 3 minutes, there are over 100 leaks totaling 2.5k. Is this common?
I've written up a Tutorial on using Instruments to track iPhone memory leaks. I'm not sure if it will help you with what you're dealing with or not...couldn't hurt, though. :-)
http://www.streamingcolour.com/blog/tutorials/tracking-iphone-memory-leaks/
Change the view to "Extended Detail" on the instruments panel. This will show you the stack trace of each leaked object after you stop recording and select the leaked object.
You do see calls into the API, but what you are interested in is finding the last method of your application before the API calls, that is where the leak is.
A tip: turn on "gather memory contents" in the leaks view. Seeing the object values should also help finding where the problem is.
You don't want any leaks. 100 leaks is not typical (at least in my apps ;) Typical should be 0.
I'm not familiar with how to use Leaks, but you can always try running the Clang analyzer on your code to see if that'll turn anything up: http://clang.llvm.org/StaticAnalysis.html. It can often find many bugs that might lead to memory leaks.
Xcode: run -> Start with Performance Tool -> Leaks
Keep in mind that the Simulator may leak when the device will not. Ran into that once already with UITableViewController class.
Use LLVM/Clang Static Analyzer.
Note also that the leak tool is not going to show you instances where objects are over-retained and still held on to. Leaks are cases where objects that should have been let go are just hanging around with no-one to clean them up. Over retained objects are validly held onto even though you'd think they should be gone - thus the leak tool cannot point them out, since they are still referred to and there's no way to tell them apart from objects that should still be retained.
To find those, use the memory reporting tool and make sure that memory use goes down fully after you free an object. If you notice something isn't freeing memory, you can start by putting breakpoints in dealloc to see if what you expect to see released is actually getting released.
You need to look for both cases to keep a clean memory footprint.
Run -> Start with Performance Tool -> Leaks
To detect memory leaks you can use the "build and analyze" function of Xcode.
Simply select Build -> Build and Analyze in the Xcode menu.
Made a sum up of the main memory leak tools: http://bcaccinolo.wordpress.com/2010/09/15/iphone-essential-performance-tools-list/
Leaks application that can be found in Xcode: run -> Start with Performance Tool -> Leaks.
Appleā€™s Instruments utility that can be found in /Developer/Applications/Performance Tools.
One of the best way to find the memory leaks is Select Product-> Analyze. In the left Xcode shows in which file you have memory leaks. What are the variable causing memory leaks. This is one of the best way to find memory leaks.
The memory debugger (button just over the console, next to the view debugger) is quite useful too.
It will show you leaks, and you can check /filter easily if objects are still in memory when they shouldn't.