This tutorial describes how to detect memory leaks in a child process of a service (or any descendant process of the service).
This tutorial covers the following:
Related tutorials:
Detecting memory leaks in a service.
Detecting memory leaks in an IIS ISAPI DLL.
Detecting memory leaks in ASP.Net with IIS.
Detecting memory leaks in ASP.Net with Web Development Server.
Detecting detect memory leaks for a child process.
This tutorial applies to all native applications and to mixed-mode applications where the startup code is native.
If your application is written entirely in .Net or .Net Core, or your application is mixed-mode with the startup code written in .Net or .Net core you can skip the part of this tutorial relating to the NT Service API and go straight to the detecting memory leaks in a service child process section.
Memory Validator ships with an example service and an example child process launched by the service. These can be found in the following directories in the Memory Validator installation directory:
or
or
The childProcess has already been modified to use the NT Service API. In this tutorial, we’ll describe the modifications you would make to the child process to make it work correctly with Memory Validator.
The NT Service API is a simple API that allows you to load the Memory Validator profiling DLL and start the process of collecting memory allocation data.
The API also includes some debugging functions to help provide debugging information via log files (the only way to get data out of a service without a connection to the Memory Validator user interface).
static void attachToMemoryValidator() { if (bLogging) { // Set the log file name. // When anything goes wrong the API will write error information to this file. // You can also write to this log file any status errors you need (you'll see examples in this source file) svlMVStub_setLogFileName(SZLOGFILENAME); svlMVStub_deleteLogFile(); } if (bLogging) { svlMVStub_writeToLogFileW(L"About to load Memory Validator\r\n"); } SVL_SERVICE_ERROR errCode; #ifdef IS6432 // x86 with x64 GUI errCode = svlMVStub_LoadMemoryValidator6432(); #else //#ifdef IS6432 // x86 with x86 GUI // x64 with x64 GUI errCode = svlMVStub_LoadMemoryValidator(); #endif //#ifdef IS6432 if (bLogging) { if (errCode != SVL_OK) { DWORD lastError; lastError = GetLastError(); svlMVStub_writeToLogFileW(L"Memory Validator load failed. \r\n"); svlMVStub_writeToLogFileLastError(lastError); svlMVStub_writeToLogFile(errCode); svlMVStub_dumpPathToLogFile(); } else { svlMVStub_writeToLogFileW(L"Memory Validator load success. \r\n"); } } // DO NOT setup a service callback because this is a child application of a service, not a service // start Memory Validator errCode = svlMVStub_StartMemoryValidator(); if (bLogging) { if (errCode != SVL_OK) { DWORD lastError; lastError = GetLastError(); svlMVStub_writeToLogFileW(L"Starting Memory Validator failed. \r\n"); svlMVStub_writeToLogFileLastError(lastError); svlMVStub_writeToLogFile(errCode); } svlMVStub_writeToLogFileW(L"Finished loading Memory Validator\r\n"); } }
Now that the NT Service API has been implemented in your application, we can start collecting memory allocation data from the service child process.
Select the application executable (the service’s child process) you are going to monitor. For this example the application is examples\serviceWithAChildProcess\serviceWithAChildProcess\x64\Release\childProcess_x64.exe.
Choose the appropriate native/mixed-mode/.Net option to specify which types of code you want to detect memory leaks for. Mixed-mode is the default, as this collects memory allocation data for all types of code.
There are a few things to check.
svlMVStub_setLogFileName(SZLOGFILENAME);
You have learned how to add the NT Service API to a native application that is going to be launched from a service, how to use Memory Validator to monitor a service’s child process, and what to look at to diagnose errors if things don’t work first time.