Instead of collecting objects after a fixed number of allocations (700)
You could make it dynamic like this:
# initial values
min_allocated_memory = 0
max_allocated_memory = 0
next_gc_run = 1024 * 1024
def manage_memory():
allocated_memory = get_allocated_memory()
min_allocated_memory = min(min_allocated_memory, allocated_memory)
max_allocated_memory = max(max_allocated_memory, allocated_memory)
if max_allocated_memory - min_allocated_memory > next_gc_run:
# run the gc
memory_freed, allocated_memory = run_gc()
next_gc_run = max(
allocated_memory * 1.5 - memory_freed, 1024 * 1024
)
min_allocated_memory = allocated_memory
max_allocated_memory = allocated_memory
manage_memory() should be called after every allocation and after a ref
count of an object reaches 0 (memory is freed)
Expected behaviours:
=> As less objects contain cyclic references as less often the GC will
run (memory_freed is small)
=> As more objects contain cyclic references as more often the GC will
run (memory_freed is large)
=> If memory utiliaziation grows fast (burst allocations) GC will run
less often: next_gc_run = allocated_memory * 1.5 - memory_freed
... Of course the constants: 1.5 and 1024 * 1024 are only suggestions...
- Ralf
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