Hi Maruan,
The code to reproduce it is:
import org.apache.pdfbox.rendering.printing.Scaling;
import org.apache.pdfbox.rendering.printing.Orientation;
import org.apache.pdfbox.pdmodel.PDDocument;
import org.apache.pdfbox.rendering.PDFPrinter;
import java.awt.print.Paper;
public class PdfBoxExample {
public static void main(String[] args) throws Exception {
String fileName = args[1];
while (true) {
Paper paper = new Paper();
int width = 4, height = 6;
paper.setSize(width * 72, height * 72);
paper.setImageableArea(0, 0, width * 72, height * 72);
PDDocument pdf=PDDocument.load(fileName);
PDFPrinter printer = new PDFPrinter(pdf, Scaling.SCALE_TO_FIT,
Orientation.AUTO, paper);
printer.silentPrint();
pdf.close();
System.gc();
}
}
}
On 10 April 2014 16:15, Maruan Sahyoun <[email protected]> wrote:
> Hi Joseph,
>
> the attachments didn't make it to the mailing list. Could you upload it to
> a public location? Id the behavior reproducible with any PDF or only with
> some. Could you oplad a sample PDF too?
>
> BR
> Maruan Sahyoun
>
> Am 10.04.2014 um 13:50 schrieb Joseph Siddal <[email protected]>:
>
> > Hi,
> >
> > I've found a memory leak that is caused when doing high volumes of
> printing.
> >
> > The code that reproduces the bug is attached. The code just continuously
> sends the same printjob to the default printer. The pdf I'm using is
> available here. The memory leak is evident after 6mins of running the code.
> The sun.print.CustomMediaTray has 2 static ArrayList fields which are
> continuously growing in size going from size 29000 to 10000+ after 6
> minutes and continuing to climb.
> >
> > This is using OSX Mavericks, JDK 1.8.0.
> >
> > Any help would be appreciated.
> >
> > Regards
> > Joseph
>
>