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Posted to java-dev@axis.apache.org by "Prasanna Sundarrajan (JIRA)" <ax...@ws.apache.org> on 2007/06/04 06:28:16 UTC

[jira] Commented: (AXIS-2668) Axis 1.3 - Garbage collection issue

    [ https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/AXIS-2668?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:comment-tabpanel#action_12501091 ] 

Prasanna Sundarrajan commented on AXIS-2668:
--------------------------------------------

Hi All, 

Can one you update me on this issue, this is very critical for us. Kindly look into this and do the needful. 

Thanks and Regards
Prasanna

> Axis 1.3 - Garbage collection issue
> -----------------------------------
>
>                 Key: AXIS-2668
>                 URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/AXIS-2668
>             Project: Axis
>          Issue Type: Bug
>    Affects Versions: 1.3
>         Environment: OS - AIX Application Server Oracle Applicatio Server, AXIS Version 1.3
>            Reporter: Prasanna Sundarrajan
>            Priority: Critical
>         Attachments: com.zip
>
>
> Hi All, 
> This is Prasanna. Currently I am working for an application which is a service oriented application. 
> The services are designed using Java - Axis 1.3 and the services are hosted by the Oracle Application 
> Server running under AIX (IBM JDK version 1.5) and the services are consumed by .net application. 
> During our performance load testing we found a weird behavior in our application. We would like to share the same with you. It would be great if any of you kindly look in to the below issue and give any solution to resolve the same. 
> We had encountered Out-of memory exception in 
> the java application server when a single user performs the same transaction 
> repeatedly for more than 30 minutes. We tested this scenario using performance 
> load scripts. We have analyzed the heap dump and found that the objects created in the application server are not garbage collected and they still have references and all the references are created under MessageContext objects. 
> As part of this exercise we profiled the java code and none of the code has memory leaks. 
> We would like to know how this to be handled do we need to close or dispose anything explicitly. Looking forward your valuable response. Any help or pointer is highly appreciated.
> Thanks in advance
> Prasanna. 

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