From: Paul C. <pau...@lu...> - 2002-05-15 19:08:40
|
What do you mean by "does not release memory"? You should never have to restart the machine, this is completely unnecessary. Just kill the java process that is running JBoss. If your application is not shutting down cleanly, think about any threads that you may be creating, esp things like java.util.Timer or interaction with the JMX Timer service. If necessary, you can run a debugger to see where the threads are waiting. Paul > -----Original Message----- > From: Junjie Ding [mailto:jd...@tu...] > Sent: Wednesday, May 15, 2002 11:28 AM > To: jbo...@li... > Subject: [JBoss-user] Anyway to clean memory usage after run jboss? > > > I am running JBoss in Redhat linux 7.1(Linux 2.4.2-2), using > jdk1.3.1_01 and > JBoss-2.4.4_Tomcat-4.0.1. > > The problem I have is JBoss doesn't release all the memory it > took after I > ran it > and my application. The memory it takes increases as more > beans I use in my > application > but it doesn't release them. Even if I shut down JBoss. The > only work around > I have now > is restart the machine, which is ridiculous. I'm not sure if > this is because > of memory > leak in jboss or jdk1.3.1. > > Can anybody point me out if this is because of JBoss and the > solution? Any > related > information will be helpful and appreciated! > > Thanks > > Epic > > > > _______________________________________________ > JBoss-user mailing list > JBo...@li... > https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/jboss-user > |