Visualizing Objects and Memory Usage
Document type :
Communication dans un congrès avec actes
Title :
Visualizing Objects and Memory Usage
Author(s) :
Martinez Peck, Mariano [Auteur correspondant]
Centre for Digital Systems [CERI SN - IMT Nord Europe]
Analyses and Languages Constructs for Object-Oriented Application Evolution [RMOD]
Bouraqadi, Noury [Auteur correspondant]
Centre for Digital Systems [CERI SN - IMT Nord Europe]
Denker, Marcus [Auteur]
Analyses and Languages Constructs for Object-Oriented Application Evolution [RMOD]
Ducasse, Stephane [Auteur]
Analyses and Languages Constructs for Object-Oriented Application Evolution [RMOD]
Fabresse, Luc [Auteur]
Centre for Digital Systems [CERI SN - IMT Nord Europe]
Centre for Digital Systems [CERI SN - IMT Nord Europe]
Analyses and Languages Constructs for Object-Oriented Application Evolution [RMOD]
Bouraqadi, Noury [Auteur correspondant]
Centre for Digital Systems [CERI SN - IMT Nord Europe]
Denker, Marcus [Auteur]

Analyses and Languages Constructs for Object-Oriented Application Evolution [RMOD]
Ducasse, Stephane [Auteur]

Analyses and Languages Constructs for Object-Oriented Application Evolution [RMOD]
Fabresse, Luc [Auteur]
Centre for Digital Systems [CERI SN - IMT Nord Europe]
Conference title :
Smalltalks'2010
City :
Buenos Ares
Country :
Argentine
Start date of the conference :
2010-11-10
Publication date :
2010-11-10
HAL domain(s) :
Informatique [cs]/Langage de programmation [cs.PL]
English abstract : [en]
Most of the current garbage collector implementations work by reachability. This means they only take care of the objects that nobody else points to. As a consequence, there are objects which are not really used but are ...
Show more >Most of the current garbage collector implementations work by reachability. This means they only take care of the objects that nobody else points to. As a consequence, there are objects which are not really used but are not garbage collected because they are still referenced. Such unused but reachable objects create memory leaks. This is a problem because applications use much more memory than what is actually needed. In addition, they may get slower and crash. It is important to understand which parts of the system are instantiated but also which are used or unused. There is a plethora of work on runtime information or class instantiation visualizations but none of them show whether instances are actually used. Such information is important to identify memory leaks. In this paper, we present some visualizations that show used/unused objects in object-oriented applications. For this, we use Distribution Map which is a visualization showing spread and focus of properties across systems. We extend Distribution Maps to represent the way classes are used or not, since we distinguish between a class that just has instances from one that has used instances. To identify unused objects, we modified the Pharo Virtual Machine.Show less >
Show more >Most of the current garbage collector implementations work by reachability. This means they only take care of the objects that nobody else points to. As a consequence, there are objects which are not really used but are not garbage collected because they are still referenced. Such unused but reachable objects create memory leaks. This is a problem because applications use much more memory than what is actually needed. In addition, they may get slower and crash. It is important to understand which parts of the system are instantiated but also which are used or unused. There is a plethora of work on runtime information or class instantiation visualizations but none of them show whether instances are actually used. Such information is important to identify memory leaks. In this paper, we present some visualizations that show used/unused objects in object-oriented applications. For this, we use Distribution Map which is a visualization showing spread and focus of properties across systems. We extend Distribution Maps to represent the way classes are used or not, since we distinguish between a class that just has instances from one that has used instances. To identify unused objects, we modified the Pharo Virtual Machine.Show less >
Language :
Anglais
Peer reviewed article :
Oui
Audience :
Internationale
Popular science :
Non
Collections :
Source :
Files
- https://hal.inria.fr/inria-00531510/document
- Open access
- Access the document
- https://hal.inria.fr/inria-00531510/document
- Open access
- Access the document
- https://hal.inria.fr/inria-00531510/document
- Open access
- Access the document
- document
- Open access
- Access the document
- Mart10a-Smalltalks-VisualizingUnusedObjects.pdf
- Open access
- Access the document
- document
- Open access
- Access the document
- Mart10a-Smalltalks-VisualizingUnusedObjects.pdf
- Open access
- Access the document