Versions: Python 2.5.1 (r251:54863, May 14 2007, 10:50:04) SWIG Version 1.3.20
Hello I have some code that wraps a C++ library so I may use it in python. The code basically just gets some data and puts it in the PyArrayObject* which is returned as a PyObject*. I then call it from python like so: self.c = __f2.fdct2_wrapper(x,self.nbs,self.nba,self.ac) I then loop (which pretty much only calls this function) over and over. I put the variable as a self.c hoping the garbage collector would know how to delete it after the class goes out of scope. I also tried explicitly deleting the variable (del var) in the loop with no success. In all cases quiet a large memory leak occurs (and grows rather quickly). I believe this is comming from the fact that the thing that is returned is a pointer to the data. So the returning object is a pointer. The python garbage collector then doesn't know how to delete this structure and probably (maybe) just deletes the pointer after the class goes out of scope. Leave the data there and causing the memory leak issue. I however doesn't know how to tell python that this variable is a pointer and to delete whats going to it. Or perhaps tell SWIG to delete the data, and return the structure some other way? Here is the c++ wrapping code, perhaps there is an easy way to fix this memory leak (I believe a lot of SWIG people probably do this) perhaps some function call from the python? or some special call from the SWIG? Thanks a bunch! // set up the list output PyListObject* out; PyArrayObject* output; out = (PyListObject*) PyList_New(0); npy_intp dims[2]; int i,j; for(i=0;i<g.size();i++) { // append a list for this scale PyList_Append((PyObject*) out,PyList_New(0)); for(j=0;j<g[i].size();j++) { // set the dimensions for this scale & angle dims[0] = g[i][j].n(); dims[1] = g[i][j].m(); // make an array for this scale & angle's data output = (PyArrayObject*) PyArray_SimpleNewFromData(2, dims, PyArray_CDOUBLE,g[i][j]._data); Py_INCREF((PyObject*) output); // append this angle's data to the list for this scale PyList_Append(PyList_GetItem((PyObject*) out,i),(PyObject*) output); // zero the CpxNumMat for this scale & angle, hand ownership to numpy g[i][j]._data = NULL; g[i][j]._m = 0; g[i][j]._n = 0; output->flags = output->flags | NPY_OWNDATA; } } return (PyObject*) out; -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list