What is the JConsole Stats.? See what is the exact reason behind the Memory Allocation.
Thanks & Regards, Pravin Uttarwar | Perennial Systems [email protected] | Cell: +91 9371288080 | Tel: +91 (020) 2421 1286 Ext:2007 On 17 July 2010 00:38, Mark <[email protected]> wrote: > > > What I would suggest is opening the process viewer and seeing what process > allocates the memory. WebORB for .NET memory footprint is 15MB. However, if > the code you host in there allocates a byte array for 5.6GB, that could > explain the problem.. > > Mark > > > --- In [email protected] <flexcoders%40yahoogroups.com>, > "valdhor" <valdhorli...@...> wrote: > > > > I do not believe the Flex SWF's are taking up the memory (There is no way > for them to do so). > > > > It is more likely the language you are using with Flash remoting and > WebORB. Is it Java? I can see an improperly written Java class reserving > large amounts of mamory. What is the JVM settings? > > > > --- In [email protected] <flexcoders%40yahoogroups.com>, > "kevin_ketterer" <kevinkett@> wrote: > > > > > > Sorry, the Flash SWF did NOT reserve any memory... so only the two Flex > SWFs did. > > > > > > --- In [email protected] <flexcoders%40yahoogroups.com>, > "kevin_ketterer" <kevinkett@> wrote: > > > > > > > > We have a Flex-based shopping cart applicatiion, using Cairngorm, > WebORB, and ASP.NET. It's running on IIS 7/Windows 2008 server. The > release version of the SWF is about 1.4MB in size. This is the only > application hosted on this server. > > > > > > > > Our server team tells us that when a client launches the application, > it reserves about 5.6GB of virtual memory, including 3GB of RAM. It only > used the memory it neede, however. Since this is a new installation for the > server team, we ran some comparison tests to see what "normal" is. Each of > the following apps were put in their own application pool: > > > > > > > > * An application with a plain ASP.NET (HTML) page did not reserve > the memory. > > > > > > > > * A small (~150k) Flex SWF in an HTML page reserved 5.6GB, but again > used much less. > > > > > > > > * A 4k Flash SWF in an HTML page reserved 3GB. > > > > > > > > Although this behavior is not causing an immediate problem, we are > concerned that this could become a bigger issue down the road. We would also > like to understand how a SWF that runs on the client might affect server > virtual memory. > > > > > > > > I'll appreciate any thoughts you might have on this issue. > > > > > > > > Thank you, > > > > Kevin > > > > > > > > > > > >

