Hi Sven

Yes, like I said earlier, after your first email, that I think its not a
problem with NeoCSV as with what I'm doing and an out of memory condition.  

Have you ever seen a stack after sending kill -SIGUSR1 that looks like this:

output file stack is full.
output file stack is full.
output file stack is full.
output file stack is full.
output file stack is full.
....


What does that mean?

Answers to your questions below.

Thanks again for helping me out



Sven Van Caekenberghe-2 wrote
> OK then, you *can* read/process 300MB .csv files ;-)
> 
> What does your CSV file look like, can you show a couple of lines ?
> 
> here are 2 lines + a header:
> 
> "provnum","Provname","address","city","state","zip","survey_date_output","SurveyType","defpref","tag","tag_desc","scope","defstat","statdate","cycle","standard","complaint","filedate"
> "015009","BURNS NURSING HOME, INC.","701 MONROE STREET
> NW","RUSSELLVILLE","AL","35653","2013-09-05","Health","F","0314","Give
> residents proper treatment to prevent new bed (pressure) sores or heal
> existing bed sores.","D","Deficient, Provider has date of
> correction","2013-10-10",1,"Y","N","2014-01-01"
> "015009","BURNS NURSING HOME, INC.","701 MONROE STREET
> NW","RUSSELLVILLE","AL","35653","2013-09-05","Health","F","0315","Ensure
> that each resident who enters the nursing home without a catheter is not
> given a catheter, unless medically necessary, and that incontinent
> patients receive proper services to prevent urinary tract infections and
> restore normal bladder functions.","D","Deficient, Provider has date of
> correction","2013-10-10",1,"Y","N","2014-01-01"
> 
> 
> You are using a custom record class of your own, what does that look like
> or do ?
> 
> A custom record class.    This is all publicly available data but I'm
> keeping track of the performance of US based health care providers during
> their annual inspections. So the records are notes of a deficiency during
> the inspection and I'm keeping those notes in a collection in an instance
> of the health care provider's class.   The custom record class just
> converts the CSV record to objects (Integers, Strings, DateAndTime) and
> then gets stuffed in the health care provider's deficiency history
> OrderedCollection (which has about 100 items).    Again I don't think its
> what I'm doing as much as the image isn't growing when it needs to.  
> 
> 
> 
> 
> Maybe you can try using Array again ?
> 
> I've attempted to do it where I parse and convert the entire CSV into
> domain objects then add them to the image and the parsing works fine, but
> the system runs out of resources during the update phase.  
> 
> 
> What percentage of records read do you keep ? In my example it was very
> small. Have you tried calculating your memory usage ? 
> 
> 
> I'm keeping some data from every record, but it doesn't load more than
> 500MB of the data before falling over.  I am not attempting to load the
> 9GB of CSV files into one image.  For 95% of the records in the CSV file
> 20 of the 22 columns of the data is the same from file to file, just a
> 'published date' and a 'time to expiration' date changes.   Each file
> covers a month, with about 500k deficiencies.  Each month some
> deficiencies are added to the file and some are resolved. So the total
> number of deficiencies in the image is about 500k.  Of those records that
> don't expire in a given month I'm adding the published date to a
> collection of published dates for the record and also adding the "time to
> expiration" to a collection of those to record what was made public and
> letting the rest of the data get GC'd.  I don't only load those two
> records because the other fields of the record in the CSV could change.    
> 
> I have not calculated the memory usage for the collection because I
> thought it would have no problem fitting in the 2GB of RAM I have on this
> machine.  
> 
> 
> 
>> On 14 Nov 2014, at 22:34, Paul DeBruicker <

> pdebruic@

> > wrote:
>> 
>> Yes. With the image & vm I'm having trouble with I get an array with
>> 9,942
>> elements in it.  So its works as you'd expect.
>> 
>> While processing the CSV file the image stays at about 60MB in RAM.  
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> Sven Van Caekenberghe-2 wrote
>>> Can you successfully run my example code ?
>>> 
>>>> On 14 Nov 2014, at 22:03, Paul DeBruicker <
>> 
>>> pdebruic@
>> 
>>> > wrote:
>>>> 
>>>> Hi Sven,
>>>> 
>>>> Thanks for taking a look and testing the NeoCSVReader portion for me. 
>>>> You're right of course that there's something I'm doing that's slow. 
>>>> But. 
>>>> There is something I can't figure out yet.  
>>>> 
>>>> To provide a little more detail:
>>>> 
>>>> When the 'csv reading' process completes successfully profiling shows
>>>> that
>>>> most of the time is spent in NeoCSVReader>>#peekChar and using
>>>> NeoCSVReader>>##addField: to convert a string to a DateAndTime. 
>>>> Dropping
>>>> the DateAndTime conversion speeds things up but doesn't stop it from
>>>> running
>>>> out of memory.  
>>>> 
>>>> I start the image with 
>>>> 
>>>> ./pharo-ui --memory 1000m myimage.image   
>>>> 
>>>> Splitting the CSV file helps:
>>>> ~1.5MB  5,000 lines = 1.2 seconds.
>>>> ~15MB   50,000 lines = 8 seconds.
>>>> ~30MB   100,000 lines = 16 seconds.
>>>> ~60MB   200,000 lines  = 45 seconds.
>>>> 
>>>> 
>>>> It seems that when the CSV file crosses ~70MB in size things start
>>>> going
>>>> haywire with performance, and leads to the out of memory condition. 
>>>> The
>>>> processing never ends.  Sending "kill -SIGUSR1" prints a stack
>>>> primarily
>>>> composed of:
>>>> 
>>>> 0xbffc5d08 M OutOfMemory class(Exception class)>signal 0x1f7ac060: a(n)
>>>> OutOfMemory class
>>>> 0xbffc5d20 M OutOfMemory class(Behavior)>basicNew 0x1f7ac060: a(n)
>>>> OutOfMemory class
>>>> 0xbffc5d38 M OutOfMemory class(Behavior)>new 0x1f7ac060: a(n)
>>>> OutOfMemory
>>>> class
>>>> 0xbffc5d50 M OutOfMemory class(Exception class)>signal 0x1f7ac060: a(n)
>>>> OutOfMemory class
>>>> 0xbffc5d68 M OutOfMemory class(Behavior)>basicNew 0x1f7ac060: a(n)
>>>> OutOfMemory class
>>>> 0xbffc5d80 M OutOfMemory class(Behavior)>new 0x1f7ac060: a(n)
>>>> OutOfMemory
>>>> class
>>>> 0xbffc5d98 M OutOfMemory class(Exception class)>signal 0x1f7ac060: a(n)
>>>> OutOfMemory class
>>>> 
>>>> So it seems like its trying to signal that its out of memory after its
>>>> out
>>>> of memory which triggers another OutOfMemory error.  So that's why
>>>> progress
>>>> stops.  
>>>> 
>>>> 
>>>> ** Aside - OutOfMemory should probably be refactored to be able to
>>>> signal
>>>> itself without taking up more memory, triggering itself infinitely. 
>>>> Maybe
>>>> it & its signalling morph infrastructure would be good as a singleton
>>>> **
>>>> 
>>>> 
>>>> 
>>>> I'm confused about why it runs out of memory.  According to htop the
>>>> image
>>>> only takes up about 520-540 MB of RAM when it reaches the 'OutOfMemory'
>>>> condition.  This Macbook Air laptop has 4GB, and has plenty of room for
>>>> the
>>>> image to grow.  Also I've specified a 1,000MB image size when starting. 
>>>> So
>>>> it should have plenty of room.  Is there something I should check or a
>>>> flag
>>>> somewhere that prevents it from growing on a Mac?  This is the latest
>>>> Pharo30 VM.  
>>>> 
>>>> 
>>>> Thanks for helping me get to the bottom of this
>>>> 
>>>> Paul
>>>> 
>>>> 
>>>> 
>>>> 
>>>> 
>>>> 
>>>> 
>>>> 
>>>> 
>>>> 
>>>> 
>>>> 
>>>> 
>>>> 
>>>> 
>>>> Sven Van Caekenberghe-2 wrote
>>>>> Hi Paul,
>>>>> 
>>>>> I think you must be doing something wrong with your class, the #do: is
>>>>> implemented as streaming over the record one by one, never holding
>>>>> more
>>>>> than one in memory.
>>>>> 
>>>>> This is what I tried:
>>>>> 
>>>>> 'paul.csv' asFileReference writeStreamDo: [ :file|
>>>>> ZnBufferedWriteStream on: file do: [ :out |
>>>>>   (NeoCSVWriter on: out) in: [ :writer |
>>>>>     writer writeHeader: { #Number. #Color. #Integer. #Boolean}.
>>>>>     1 to: 1e7 do: [ :each |
>>>>>       writer nextPut: { each. #(Red Green Blue) atRandom. 1e6
>>>>> atRandom.
>>>>> #(true false) atRandom } ] ] ] ].
>>>>> 
>>>>> This results in a 300Mb file:
>>>>> 
>>>>> $ ls -lah paul.csv 
>>>>> -rw-r--r--@ 1 sven  staff   327M Nov 14 20:45 paul.csv
>>>>> $ wc paul.csv 
>>>>> 10000001 10000001 342781577 paul.csv
>>>>> 
>>>>> This is a selective read and collect (loads about 10K records):
>>>>> 
>>>>> Array streamContents: [ :out |
>>>>> 'paul.csv' asFileReference readStreamDo: [ :in |
>>>>>   (NeoCSVReader on: (ZnBufferedReadStream on: in)) in: [ :reader |
>>>>>     reader skipHeader; addIntegerField; addSymbolField;
>>>>> addIntegerField;
>>>>> addFieldConverter: [ :x | x = #true ].
>>>>>     reader do: [ :each | each third < 1000 ifTrue: [ out nextPut: each
>>>>> ]
>>>>> ] ] ] ].
>>>>> 
>>>>> This worked fine on my MacBook Air, no memory problems. It takes a
>>>>> while
>>>>> to parse that much data, of course.
>>>>> 
>>>>> Sven
>>>>> 
>>>>>> On 14 Nov 2014, at 19:08, Paul DeBruicker &lt;
>>>> 
>>>>> pdebruic@
>>>> 
>>>>> &gt; wrote:
>>>>>> 
>>>>>> Hi -
>>>>>> 
>>>>>> I'm processing a 9 GBs of CSV files (the biggest file is 220MB or
>>>>>> so). 
>>>>>> I'm not sure if its because of the size of the files or the code I've
>>>>>> written to keep track of the domain objects I'm interested in, but
>>>>>> I'm
>>>>>> getting out of memory errors & crashes in Pharo 3 on Mac with the
>>>>>> latest
>>>>>> VM.  I haven't checked other vms.  
>>>>>> 
>>>>>> I'm going to profile my own code and attempt to split the files
>>>>>> manually
>>>>>> for now to see what else it could be. 
>>>>>> 
>>>>>> 
>>>>>> Right now I'm doing something similar to
>>>>>> 
>>>>>>  |file reader|
>>>>>>  file:= '/path/to/file/myfile.csv' asFileReference readStream.
>>>>>>  reader: NeoCSVReader on: file
>>>>>> 
>>>>>>  reader
>>>>>>          recordClass: MyClass; 
>>>>>>          skipHeader;
>>>>>>          addField: #myField:;
>>>>>>          ....
>>>>>>  
>>>>>> 
>>>>>>  reader do:[:eachRecord | self seeIfRecordIsInterestingAndIfSoKeepIt:
>>>>>> eachRecord].
>>>>>>  file close.
>>>>>> 
>>>>>> 
>>>>>> 
>>>>>> Is there a facility in NeoCSVReader to read a file in batches (e.g.
>>>>>> 1000
>>>>>> lines at a time) or an easy way to do that ?
>>>>>> 
>>>>>> 
>>>>>> 
>>>>>> 
>>>>>> Thanks
>>>>>> 
>>>>>> Paul
>>>> 
>>>> 
>>>> 
>>>> 
>>>> 
>>>> --
>>>> View this message in context:
>>>> http://forum.world.st/running-out-of-memory-while-processing-a-220MB-csv-file-with-NeoCSVReader-tips-tp4790264p4790319.html
>>>> Sent from the Pharo Smalltalk Users mailing list archive at Nabble.com.
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> --
>> View this message in context:
>> http://forum.world.st/running-out-of-memory-while-processing-a-220MB-csv-file-with-NeoCSVReader-tips-tp4790264p4790328.html
>> Sent from the Pharo Smalltalk Users mailing list archive at Nabble.com.





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