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Programming errors can prevent garbage collection of objects that are no longer relevant to program operation. The garbage collector collects only unreachable objects; consequently, the presence of reachable objects that remain unused indicates memory mismanagement. Consumption of all available heap space can cause an OutOfMemoryError, which usually results in program termination.

Excessive memory leaks can lead to memory exhaustion and denial of service (DoS) and must be avoided (see MSC05-J. Do not exhaust heap space for more information).

Noncompliant Code Example (Off-by-One Programming Error)

The vector object in the noncompliant code example leaks memory. The

Even though Java supports memory management through garbage collection, there are innumerable possibilities of introducing memory leaks due to programmer committed mistakes. Depending on program scale, one of the most undesired errors, the OutOfMemoryError may manifest itself wherein the heap space runs out causing program failure.

Non-Compliant Code Example

This non-compliant example shows a leaking vector object. This quickly exhausts the heap space as the programmer has mistakenly written the condition for removing the vector element as n>0 is mistakenly written as n > 0 instead of n>n >= 0. ThusConsequently, in every iteration the method leaks fails to remove one vector elementelement per invocation and quickly exhausts the available heap space.

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public class Leak {
  static Vector vector = new Vector();

  public void leakingVectoruseVector(int count) { 	
    for (int n = 0; n<countn < count; n++) {
      vector.add(Integer.toString(n));
    }
    // ...
    for (int n = count - 1; n n>0> 0; n--) { //free Free the memory
      vector.removeElementAt(n);
    }	
  }

  public static void main(String[] args) throws IOException {
    Leak le = new Leak();
    int i = 1;
    while (true) {
      System.out.println("Iteration: " + i);
      le.leakingVectoruseVector(1);
      i++;
    }
  }
}

Compliant Solution (>=)

The This compliant solution corrects the mistake by changing the loop condition to n>n >= 0. It also wraps the cleanup code in a finally block so that it still executes even if the interim code throws an exception.

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public void useVector(int count) {
  int n = 0;
  try {
    for (; n < count; n++) (int n=count-1; n>={
      vector.add(Integer.toString(n));
    }
    // ...
  } finally {
    for (n = n - 1; n >= 0; n--) {
      vector.removeElementAt(n);
    }
  }
}	

Non-Compliant Code Example

Wiki Markup
This example implements a {{stack}} data structure \[[Effective Java Programming Language Guide, Item 5]\]. The main issue is that it does not allow the garbage collector to de-allocate memory after the {{pop}} operation. The object references are retained even after the element is pop'ed. Such _obsolete references_ are not garbage collected automatically. This can get even more deceitful since none of the objects referenced by the offending object get garbage collected either.  

Compliant Solution (clear())

Prefer the use of standard language semantics where possible. This compliant solution uses the vector.clear() method, which removes all elements:

Code Block
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public void useVector(int count) { 	
  try {
    for (int n = 0; n < count; n++) {
      vector.add(Integer.toString(n));
    }
    // ...
  } finally {
    vector.clear(); // Clear the vector
  }
}

Noncompliant Code Example (Nonlocal Instance Field)

This noncompliant code example declares and allocates a HashMap instance field that is used only in the doSomething() method:

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public class Storer {
  private HashMap<Integer,String> hm = new HashMap<Integer, String>();
  
  private void doSomething() {
    // hm is used only here and never referenced again
    hm.put(1, "java");
    // ...
  }
}

Programmers may be surprised that the HashMap persists for the entire lifetime of the Storer instance.

Compliant Solution (Reduce Scope of Instance Field)

This compliant solution declares the HashMap as a local variable within the doSomething() method. The hm local variable is eliminated after the method returns. When the local variable holds the only reference to the HashMap, the garbage collector can reclaim its associated storage.

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public class Storer {
  private void doSomething() {
    HashMap<Integer,String> hm = new HashMap<Integer,String>();
    hm.put(1,"java");
    // ...
  }
}

Localizing or confining the instance field to a narrower scope simplifies garbage collection; today's generational garbage collectors perform well with short-lived objects.

Noncompliant Code Example (Lapsed Listener)

This noncompliant code example, known as the Lapsed Listener [Goetz 2005a], demonstrates unintentional object retention. The button continues to hold a reference of the reader object after completion of the readSomething() method, even though the reader object is never used again. Consequently, the garbage collector cannot collect the reader object. A similar problem occurs with inner classes because they hold an implicit reference to the enclosing class.

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public class LapseEvent extends JApplet {
  JButton button;
  public void init() {
    button = new JButton("Click Me");
    getContentPane().add(button, BorderLayout.CENTER);
    Reader reader = new Reader();
    button.addActionListener(reader);
    try {
      reader.readSomething();
    } catch (IOException e) { 
      // Handle exception 
    }		 
  }
}

class Reader implements ActionListener {
  public void actionPerformed(ActionEvent e)  {
    Toolkit.getDefaultToolkit().beep();
  }
  public void readSomething() throws IOException {
    // Read from file
  }
}

Noncompliant Code Example (Exception before Remove)

This noncompliant code example attempts to remove the reader through use of the removeActionListener() method:

Code Block
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Reader reader = new Reader();
button.addActionListener(reader);
try {
  reader.readSomething();  // Can skip next line of code
  // Dereferenced, but control flow can change
  button.removeActionListener(reader);  
} catch (IOException e) { 
  // Forward to handler 
}

If an exception is thrown by the readSomething() method, the removeActionListener() statement is never executed.

Compliant Solution (finally Block)

This compliant solution uses a finally block to ensure that the reader object's reference is removed:

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Reader reader = new Reader();
button.addActionListener(reader);
try {
  reader.readSomething();
} catch (IOException e) { 
  // Handle exception 
} finally {
  button.removeActionListener(reader);  // Always executed
}

Noncompliant Code Example (Member Object Leaks)

This noncompliant code example implements a stack data structure [Bloch 2008] that continues to hold references to elements after they have been popped off the stack:

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public class Stack {
  private Object[] elements;
  private int size = 0;

  public Stack(int initialCapacity) {
    this.elements = new Object[initialCapacity];
  }

  public void push(Object e) {
    ensureCapacity();
    elements[size++] = e;
  }

  public Object pop() { //this This method causes memory leaks
    if (size == 0) {
      throw new EmptyStackException();
    }
    return elements[--size];
  }

  /**
   * Ensure space for at least one more element, roughly
   * doubling the capacity each time the array needs to grow.
   */
  private void ensureCapacity() {
    if (elements.length == size) {
      Object[] oldElements = elements;
      elements = new Object[2 * elements.length + 1];
      System.arraycopy(oldElements, 0, elements, 0, size);
    }
  }
}

The object references are retained on the stack even after the element is popped. Such obsolete references cause objects to remain live; consequently, the objects cannot be garbage-collected.

Compliant Solution (null)

This compliant solution assigns null values to all obsolete references. The garbage collector can now include this object in its list of objects to free. A NullPointerException exception results on subsequent attempts to access the particular object.:

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public Object pop() {
  if (size == 0) {
    throw new EmptyStackException(); // Ensures object consistency
  }
  Object result = elements[--size];
  elements[size] = null; // Eliminate obsolete reference
  return result;
} 

The garbage collector can then include individual objects formerly referenced from the stack in its list of objects to free.

Although these examples appear trivial and do not represent significant problems in production code, obsolete references remain a concern While these examples may not model production scenarios, it is not uncommon to have obsolete references when dealing with data structures such as hash tables that contain containing many large -sized records.

References

records. It is prudent to assign null to array-like custom data structures; doing so with individual objects references or local variables is unnecessary because the garbage collector handles these cases automatically [Commes 2007].

Noncompliant Code Example (Strong References)

A common variation of the obsolete object fallacy is the unintentional retention of objects in collections such as maps. In this noncompliant code example, a server maintains temporary metadata about all committed secure connections:

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class HashMetaData {
  private Map<SSLSocket, InetAddress> m = Collections.synchronizedMap(
      new HashMap<SSLSocket, InetAddress>());

  public void storeTempConnection(SSLSocket sock, InetAddress ip) {
    m.put(sock, ip);  
  }

  public void removeTempConnection(SSLSocket sock) {
    m.remove(sock);  
  }	
}

It is possible to close a socket without removing it from this map. Consequently, this map may contain dead sockets until removeTempConnection() is invoked on them. In the absence of notification logic, it is impossible to determine when to call removeTempConnection(). Moreover, nullifying original objects or referents (Socket connections) is unwieldy.

Compliant Solution (Weak References)

This compliant solution uses weak references to allow timely garbage collection:

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// ...
  private Map<SSLSocket, InetAddress> m = Collections.synchronizedMap(
      new WeakHashMap<SSLSocket, InetAddress>());
// ...

Strong references prevent the garbage collector from reclaiming objects that are stored inside container objects, such as in a Map. According to the Java API [API 2014], weak reference objects "do not prevent their referents from being made finalizable, finalized, and then reclaimed."

Keys held in WeakHashMap objects are referenced through weak references. Objects become eligible for garbage collection when they lack strong references. Consequently, use of weak references allows the code to refer to the referent without delaying garbage collection of the referent. This approach is suitable only when the lifetime of the object is required to be the same as the lifetime of the key.

Simply facilitating garbage collection of unneeded objects through use of weak references is insufficient. Programs must also prune the recording data structure so that additional live entries can be accommodated. The implementation of WeakHashMap in Java 7 includes a reference queue to efficiently remove entries that correspond to a null pointer value [https://github.com/openjdk-mirror/jdk7u-jdk/blob/master/src/share/classes/java/util/WeakHashMap.java].

Compliant Solution (Soft References)

Use of soft references is also permitted. Soft references guarantee that the referent will be reclaimed before an OutOfMemoryError occurs and also that the referent will remain live until memory begins to run out.

Reference queues provide notifications when a referent is garbage-collected. When the referent is garbage-collected, the HashMap continues to strongly reference both the SoftReference object and the corresponding map value (for each entry in the HashMap).

When the garbage collector clears the reference to an object, it adds the corresponding SoftReference object to the reference queue. The SoftReference object remains in the reference queue until some operation is performed on the queue (such as a poll() or remove()). After such an operation, the SoftReference object in the hash map is also garbage-collected:

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class HashMetaData {
  private Map<SoftReference<SSLSocket>, InetAddress> m = 
        Collections.synchronizedMap(
        new HashMap<SoftReference<SSLSocket>, InetAddress>());
  ReferenceQueue queue = new ReferenceQueue();

  public void storeTempConnection(SSLSocket sock, InetAddress ip) {
    SoftReference<SSLSocket> sr;
    while ((sr = (SoftReference) queue.poll()) != null) {
      // Removes the WeakReference object and the value (not the referent)
      m.remove(sr); 
    }  
    sr = new SoftReference<SSLSocket>(sock, queue);
    m.put(sr, ip);
  }

  // removeTempConnection() deleted, no longer necessary
}

Note that the two-argument constructor of SoftReference takes a Queue argument and must be used to perform direct queue processing. Dead entries should be pruned prior to insertion.

Weak references are garbage-collected more aggressively than soft references. Consequently, weak references should be preferred in applications in which efficient memory usage is critical, and soft references should be preferred in applications that rely heavily on caching.

Risk Assessment

Memory leaks in Java applications may be exploited in a DoS attack.

Rule

Severity

Likelihood

Remediation Cost

Priority

Level

MSC04-J

Low

Unlikely

High

P1

L3

Automated Detection

ToolVersionCheckerDescription
Parasoft Jtest
Include Page
Parasoft_V
Parasoft_V
CERT.MSC04.LEAKSEnsure resources are deallocated

Related Guidelines

ISO/IEC TR 24772:2010

Memory Leak [XYL]

MITRE CWE

CWE-401, Improper Release of Memory before Removing Last Reference ("Memory Leak")

Bibliography

[API 2014]

Class Vector
Class WeakReference

[Bloch 2008]

Item 6, "Eliminate Obsolete Object References"

[Commes 2007]

"Memory Leak Avoidance"

[Goetz 2005a]

"Lapsed Listeners"

[Gupta 2005]



...

Image Added Image Added Image AddedJava memory leaks – Catch me if you can, http://www.ibm.com/developerworks/rational/library/05/0816_GuptaPalanki/Image Removed
Effective Java Programming Language Guide, Item 5, Eliminate Obsolete Object References