1. rik gretzinger
  2. PowerBuilder
  3. Thursday, 24 August 2023 19:54 PM UTC

I have a small application (MDI) that is running as a service using the timer event on the only sheet in the application.  The timer event is set at 5 sec interval.  When the event is triggered, it checks to see if it is currently processing any requests.  If it is then it exits the event and waits another 5 seconds.  If it is not running then it executes the 'process' function and exits the timer event.  The process function sets an instance boolean to true and processes the requests (printing labels).  When the process function is done, it sets the boolean to false.

 

Timer event:

if Ib_processing then

return

else

of_process()

end if

 

Of_process():

ib_processing = true

// retrieve data from database and process //

Ib_process = false

return

 

This is very basic stuff.  Most of the time there are no requests to process.  However, every 5 seconds the application grows 34Kb.  Not a lot but over several days it gets very large.  I could understand this if it was constantly printing labels as other objects are invovled and there may be an issue with thos objects.  I did test this with the queue empty (database table has no rows) and let it run for a couple of hours and it still grows.

 

I have read some of the other posts about nulling out arrays but this application does not use any.  It basically retrieves a list via a datawindow (which is only created once on the open event) and spins through the list.  If no rows are retrieved, it will exit the function.

 

Any Ideas??

 

John Fauss Accepted Answer Pending Moderation
  1. Thursday, 24 August 2023 22:24 PM UTC
  2. PowerBuilder
  3. # 1

Hi, Rik -

If you wish to create a true Windows Service that's coded in PowerBuilder, you might want to take a look at this:

    https://www.topwizprogramming.com/pbniserv.html

Best regards, John

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Chris Pollach @Appeon Accepted Answer Pending Moderation
  1. Thursday, 24 August 2023 21:18 PM UTC
  2. PowerBuilder
  3. # 2

Hi Rik;

  I would suggest ...

  • Running as a Service, I would not use any Visual Objects!
  • Use the TIming Object and not the timer event.
  • Use a DataStore and not a DW Control for the DWO.
  • At the start of the process issue a CREATE for the DS and at the end of the process use a Destroy on the DS.
  • I would also create a custom PB.INI file for the App EXE with the following entry...
    • [DataStore Behavior]
      ; No = do NOT use MS-Window handles in DS processing (Default is yes). "No" gives much better performance!
      UseHwnd=no
  • In the Destroy of the DS, I would use ...
    • <DS>.Reset()
    • <DS>.DataObject = ""
    • Yield()

HTH

Regards ... Chris

Comment
  1. Chris Pollach @Appeon
  2. Friday, 25 August 2023 11:17 AM UTC
Hi Ben;

That's a YES! The Reset() releases all buffer memory. The DataObject = "" unloads the DWO & frees it's memory. The Yield() command allows the unload & free to complete. To be ultra safe, you could also throw in a GarbageCollect() could command as well. HTH

Regards ... Chris
  1. Helpful 1
  1. Benjamin Gaesslein
  2. Monday, 28 August 2023 09:00 AM UTC
Chris,

does all this simply not happen when the DS is destroyed without being reset first? If so that does sound like a giant memory leak waiting to happen.
  1. Helpful 2
  1. Chris Pollach @Appeon
  2. Monday, 28 August 2023 12:51 PM UTC
Hi Ben;

In "theory" yes but I've found (since PB 4.0 when the DS feature was 1st added) that the PBVM does not always cleanup these resources or if it does (via Garage Collection) that it can take a while (ie: just marking memory as logically deleted vs releasing it immediately). Also, using PB versions since 1.0, I've found that switching to newer C++ compilers (ie: PB2019 => VC++2010, PB2022 => VC++2019, PB2022R2 => VC++2022) can introduce varying behaviours around PBVM function & memory on various features. I learned a way back that the procedure I gave you was the best way to force the PBVM to better handle DS management. I've had this code in my STD Framework since before the PFC was released that addressed this one perspective of DS memory control. HTH

Regards ... Chris
  1. Helpful 1
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