Vladimir: Thanks for your response. I have done as you requested (with a smaller dataset--the patterns are still there). Here is the gc()-laden output.
I don;t fully understand the meaning of all parts of these reports. But it does look like the number of objects grows (and it grows faster on the larger, slower problem). But how can I use this information to narrow down the cause? As far as your other suggestions, my PROTECTs and UNPROTECTs are all balanced (I'd get a stack imbalance if they weren't). One thing I am doing is duplicating the SEXP's that are passed from R, and working with the copies. I unprotect the copies at the end of the function. There are other, various VECTOR_ELT's in my code. So where do I go from there? Michael Dataset B06 Iteration: 1 Garbage collection 67 = 33+9+25 (level 2) ... 778324 cons cells free (42%) 32.4 Mbytes of heap free (28%) Dataset B06 Iteration: 2 Garbage collection 92 = 52+11+29 (level 2) ... 778303 cons cells free (42%) 43.9 Mbytes of heap free (34%) Dataset B06 Iteration: 3 Garbage collection 112 = 69+12+31 (level 2) ... 778303 cons cells free (42%) 43.9 Mbytes of heap free (34%) Dataset B06 Iteration: 4 Garbage collection 126 = 79+13+34 (level 2) ... 778303 cons cells free (42%) 50.7 Mbytes of heap free (38%) Dataset B06 Iteration: 5 Garbage collection 139 = 89+14+36 (level 2) ... 778303 cons cells free (42%) 50.7 Mbytes of heap free (38%) Dataset B06 Iteration: 6 Garbage collection 149 = 95+15+39 (level 2) ... 778303 cons cells free (42%) 58.0 Mbytes of heap free (41%) Dataset B06 Iteration: 7 Garbage collection 157 = 101+15+41 (level 2) ... 778303 cons cells free (42%) 58.0 Mbytes of heap free (41%) Dataset B06 Iteration: 8 Garbage collection 165 = 107+15+43 (level 2) ... 778303 cons cells free (42%) 58.0 Mbytes of heap free (41%) Dataset B06 Iteration: 9 Garbage collection 173 = 112+16+45 (level 2) ... 778303 cons cells free (42%) 58.0 Mbytes of heap free (41%) Dataset B06 Iteration: 10 Garbage collection 181 = 118+16+47 (level 2) ... 778303 cons cells free (42%) 58.0 Mbytes of heap free (41%) Dataset B06 Iteration: 11 Garbage collection 188 = 123+16+49 (level 2) ... 778303 cons cells free (42%) 58.0 Mbytes of heap free (41%) Dataset B06 Iteration: 12 Garbage collection 195 = 128+16+51 (level 2) ... 778303 cons cells free (42%) 58.0 Mbytes of heap free (41%) Dataset B06 Iteration: 13\ Garbage collection 202 = 132+17+53 (level 2) ... 778303 cons cells free (42%) 58.0 Mbytes of heap free (41%) Dataset B06 Iteration: 14 Garbage collection 209 = 137+17+55 (level 2) ... 778303 cons cells free (42%) 58.0 Mbytes of heap free (41%) On Fri, 2007-05-25 at 19:29 -0400, Vladimir Dergachev wrote: > On Friday 25 May 2007 7:12 pm, Michael Braun wrote: > > Thanks in advance to anyone that might be able to help me with this > > > > Also, it is not just the compiled call that slows down. EVERYTHING > > slows down, even those that consist only of standard R functions. The > > time for each of these function calls is roughly proportional to the > > time of the .Call to the C function. > > > > Another observation is that when I terminate the algorithm, do a rm > > (list=ls()), and then a gc(), not all of the memory is returned to the > > OS. It is not until I terminate the R session that I get all of the > > memory back. In my C code, I am not doing anything to de-allocate the > > SEXP's I create, relying on the PROTECT/UNPROTECT mechanism instead (is > > this right?). > > > > I spent most of the day thinking I have a memory leak, but that no > > longer appears to be the case. I tried using Rprof(), but that only > > gives me the aggregated relative time spent in each function (more than > > 80% of the time, it's in the .Call). > > One possibility is that you are somehow creating a lot of R objects (say by > calling assign() or missing UNPROTECT()) and this slows garbage collector > down. The garbage collector running time will grow with the number of objects > you have - their total size does not have to be large. > > Could you try printing numbers from gc() call and checking whether the > numbers > of allocated objects grow a lot ? > > best > > Vladimir Dergachev > > > > > So I'm stuck. Can anyone help? > > > > Thanks, > > > > Michael > > > The information contained in this transmission may contain privileged and > confidential information. It is intended only for the use of the person(s) > named above. If you are not the intended recipient, you are hereby notified > that any review, dissemination, distribution or duplication of this > communication is strictly prohibited. If you are not the intended recipient, > please contact the sender by reply email and destroy all copies of the > original message. > > -- Michael Braun Assistant Professor of Marketing MIT Sloan School of Management One Amherst St., E40-169 Cambridge, MA 02142 (617) 253-3436 [EMAIL PROTECTED] ______________________________________________ R-devel@r-project.org mailing list https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-devel