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  1. Apache Jena
  2. JENA-689

Fuseki/TDB memory leak for concurrent updates/queries

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Details

    • Bug
    • Status: Closed
    • Major
    • Resolution: Abandoned
    • Fuseki 1.0.1, TDB 1.0.1
    • None
    • Fuseki, TDB
    • None
    • OSX 10.9.2, 2.8 GHz, 16G RAM, SSD
      and CentOS release 6.4, x86_64, 64G RAM, SSD

    Description

      When running concurrent POST updates and queries against a Fuseki/TDB server, the server appears to bleed memory until it eventually runs out and dies with:

      java.lang.OutOfMemoryError: GC overhead limit exceeded

      Using the included TDB config file, sample data file, and Groovy script, the Fuseki/TDB server can consistently be knocked down. The script runs four concurrent threads: one that repeatedly POSTs data (in separate contexts/graphs) and three that query the server for triple counts.

      To execute the script, do the following:

      1. Install Groovy
      2. Download and install jena-fuseki-1.0.1
      3. Download the attached file FusekiTest.tar.gz and untar it in the jena-fuseki directory
      4. Edit the fuseki-server script, set the max heap size to 2G (--Xmx2G)
      5. Start the server with: ./fuseki-server --config=config-test.ttl
      6. In a separate window/shell, execute: groovy query.groovy
      7. Wait a few minutes for the OOE to occur. The script will output some stats.

      A typical run of the script will result in:

      Added context #1
      Added context #2
      Added context #3
      Added context #4
      Added context #5
      Added context #6
      Added context #7
      Added context #8
      Added context #9
      Query thread dying
      Total contexts added: 9
      Total triples added: 4500000
      Total successful queries: 155

      While this simple test fails consistently on OSX and running with a 2G heap Fuseki/TDB server, we've also observed it running on CentOS with a 16GB heap max and monitoring with NewRelic. It took a lot longer, but the end result was the same: all the heaps (regular, eden, survivor, and old gen) eventually converge on their maximums and the JVM fails.

      It's interesting to note that if all the contexts/graphs are added FIRST (with no concurrent queries), everything works just fine.

      Attachments

        1. config-no-union.ttl
          1 kB
          Rob Vesse
        2. FusekiTest.tar.gz
          9.47 MB
          Ola Bildtsen
        3. No Union Graph Test.png
          69 kB
          Rob Vesse
        4. Original Test.png
          86 kB
          Rob Vesse
        5. out.txt
          9 kB
          Ola Bildtsen
        6. out2.txt
          9 kB
          Ola Bildtsen
        7. query.groovy
          3 kB
          Ola Bildtsen
        8. query-no-union.groovy
          2 kB
          Rob Vesse

        Activity

          People

            Unassigned Unassigned
            swedemn Ola Bildtsen
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            Dates

              Created:
              Updated:
              Resolved: