Hello, I've been working on a project that adds properties to objects in a variable order as they come in over the network (hidden classes and similar optimizations can't be applied). I've noticed that V8, on both Chrome and Node, uses huge amounts of memory to represent them compared to other JS engines. I'm testing on Windows.
In 64-bit V8, an object with 50 simple properties with integer values uses ~6000 bytes of memory, which works out to >100 bytes overhead per entry. 32-bit is somewhat better at ~3000 bytes per object and >45 bytes overhead per entry, but it's still really bad. In comparison, the same 50-property objects were only ~900 bytes each in Firefox and Edge. That's 3-6X less! I've included a test that shows the issue if you'd like to try it out: https://repl.it/HIMc/7. Be sure to turn off infinite loop protection in settings. After running it, you can force a gc and check the browser's memory usage (divide by 200000, that's the test # of objects). Anyone else seen similar problems? That seems like a crazy amount of overhead per property. -Russ -- -- v8-users mailing list v8-users@googlegroups.com http://groups.google.com/group/v8-users --- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "v8-users" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to v8-users+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com. For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.