New submission from Kaushik Kannan <[email protected]>:
I wrote a daemon to monitor a directory and send out emails periodically. To
create the email, I used MIMEMultipart() object. When as_string() method is
called on the MIMEMultipart() object, it seemed to cause memory leaks. On
looking at the as_string() method, I saw that the
email.generator.Generator().flatten() method call is causing the memory leak. I
copied the as_string() method out as a function and used it for tracing the
memory leak.
#!/usr/bin/python
from guppy import hpy
import time
import gc
from email.MIMEMultipart import MIMEMultipart
from email.MIMEText import MIMEText
from cStringIO import StringIO
from email.generator import Generator
def as_string_mod(msg, unixfrom=False):
"""Return the entire formatted message as a string.
Optional `unixfrom' when True, means include the Unix From_ envelope
header.
This is a convenience method and may not generate the message exactly
as you intend because by default it mangles lines that begin with
"From ". For more flexibility, use the flatten() method of a
Generator instance.
"""
fp = StringIO()
g = Generator(fp)
g.flatten(msg, unixfrom=unixfrom)
return fp.getvalue()
msg = MIMEMultipart()
msg['From'] = '[email protected]'
msg['To'] = '[email protected]'
msg['Subject'] = 'Function'
msg.attach(MIMEText('Blah'))
if __name__=='__main__':
while True:
as_string_mod(msg)
gc.collect()
print hpy().heap()
time.sleep(5)
----------
nosy: +kauboy
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<http://bugs.python.org/issue11693>
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