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February 01, 1999 12:00 AM

Shortcut for Spotting Memory Leaks

Windows IT Pro
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  1. Launch Task Manager.

  2. Click the Processes tab.

  3. Click Mem Usage to arrange the processes by memory use.

  4. Use common sense to determine if an application has a memory leak. For example, if an application has run all day or for several days and is using more memory than you’d expect (such as Netscape using 45MB), the application probably isn’t allocating memory correctly.

If you find an application that is suspect, perform the following steps: Shut down the application, log off and log back on, relaunch Task Manager, click the Processes tab, click Mem Usage to arrange the processes by memory use, and restart the application. You'll see immediately how much memory the application needs to start (e.g., 3140KB). This figure provides a baseline estimate of the required memory. If this number grows substantially over time, the process might have a memory leak.

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Comments
  • Des
    8 years ago
    Jan 17, 2004

    One of the reasons I switched to Win2000 was to get away from all the memory leaks I experienced with Win95/98. Though it (Win2000) requires more memory to run. I have noticed less leaks.

  • everlene smith
    9 years ago
    Dec 28, 2003

    hi why is my pc so slow and can you help?

  • David
    9 years ago
    Nov 10, 2003

    Hi !

    I need to know why my server (1 GB RAM) is letting SQL Server 2000 have approx 850 MB of memory exclusively. Does this mean that the DB suffer from memory leak problems ?

    Regards,

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