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Thanks, I wish I was running Solaris so it could be a magic fix like that.  I am 
running
RedHat Linux 6.1 though. =(

Bruce Butterfield wrote:

> ----------------------------------------------------------------
> BEFORE YOU POST, search the faq at <http://java.apache.org/faq/>
> WHEN YOU POST, include all relevant version numbers, log files,
> and configuration files.  Don't make us guess your problem!!!
> ----------------------------------------------------------------
>
> If you're running Solaris make sure you have the latest jdk1.2.2 from
> Sun -- our memory leaks mysteriously fixed themselves after an upgrade.
>
> Joshua Slack wrote:
> >
> > ----------------------------------------------------------------
> > BEFORE YOU POST, search the faq at <http://java.apache.org/faq/>
> > WHEN YOU POST, include all relevant version numbers, log files,
> > and configuration files.  Don't make us guess your problem!!!
> > ----------------------------------------------------------------
> >
> > Hi everyone,
> >
> > I am experiencing an odd error.  Every time I run a servlet, (Even just the Hello
> > example servlet) my system free memory seems to go down a bit and never recover.
> > On average, I seem to lose 110-125 bytes per request.  I am using "top" to monitor
> > the usage.  The odd thing is that my java process stays roughly the same in memory
> > usage, never going much higher than 8-10M.  When I restart Apache, I don't recover
> > the lost system memory.
> >
> > My setup is a dual processor PIII 500 MHZ, RH6.1, Sun's JDK1.2.2, JServ 1.1b3, and
> > Apache 1.3.9  I have 256MB of memory.
> >
> > I hit the servlet several times per second (about 80-100) and then divide the
> > total system free memory loss by the number of requests to get the above "loss per
> > request".  When the time frame for session invalidation expires, I do not see any
> > memory being freed.  I have tried shortening the session timeout as an
> > experiment.  I have also tried running each request in the same session and in
> > seperate sessions.  Also, I have tried explicitly calling garbage collection.
> >
> > As I said, it doesn't seem specific to the code, as even if I run only the Hello
> > example servlet for my test, I experience this problem.
> >
> > -- Joshua Slack
> > [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> > Obj.X, Inc.
> >
> > --
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