On 9/17/2014 10:24 AM, Ahmed Hosni wrote:
I am using tomcat 7 on production environment, I used Find Leaks
option it called GC but I didn't get any information.It should show
more information, I hope to get information about memory and unreachable
objects which caused the leak.
Are you sure
Thanks for all your response.
I did see today there were about 6 zip files each of 50-60MB in the WEBAPP
folder. These were some back-up files. I did archive these files to other
folder and restarted the TOMCAT. Now when TOMCAT was restarted, the memory
was reduced and CPU consumption was stabiliz
Use profiler.
Take a look at: http://www.yourkit.com/overview/index.jsp
It is a good profiler with manual which will teach you how to use yourkit to
find memory leaks.
Kazakevich Ilya,
MCP, SCJP
-Original Message-
From: Black Friday [mailto:bf
Diego Rodríguez Martín wrote:
> Hi,
>
>I'm not an expert, but I think Tomcat 4.X is not compatible with JDK
> 1.5.
That is not correct. Tomcat 4.x works quite happily with 1.4, 1.5 and
1.6. I have also had a number of recent versions running on 1.3 and 1.2
JVMs although without extensive test
Hi,
I'm not an expert, but I think Tomcat 4.X is not compatible with JDK
1.5.
Regards,
Diego Rodríguez
Black Friday escribió:
Hi,
My system environment is: Windows 2000 Server. JDK 1.5, tomcat 4.X, Oracle 9
The problem is:
After tomcat was started, the memory of the tomcat grows
Some servlet on startup 'could' be a problem.
To get a more definite insight, it might be worth obtaining a Java Heap Dump
when you think the memory utilization is very high(close to 1.3G). This
would help you know what objects are consuming a large portion of the heap
and thus a potential indicati
May be some servlet is start up with tomcat.
like
load-on-startup
check your server.xml and webapps directory
- Original Message -
From: "Black Friday"
To:
Sent: Friday, March 06, 2009 11:40 AM
Subject: Tomcat Memory Leaks
> Hi,
>
> My system environment is: Windows 2000 Server