The function below takes a python file handle, reads in packed binary data from the file, creates a Python dictionary and returns it. If I loop it endlessly, it'll continually consume RAM. What's wrong with my RefCounting?
static PyObject* __binParse_getDBHeader(PyObject *self, PyObject *args){
PyObject *o; //generic object
PyObject* pyDB = NULL; //this has to be a py file object
if (!PyArg_ParseTuple(args, "O", &pyDB)){
return NULL;
} else {
Py_INCREF(pyDB);
if (!PyFile_Check(pyDB)){
Py_DECREF(pyDB);
PyErr_SetString(PyExc_IOError, "argument 1 must be open file handle");
return NULL;
}
}
FILE *fhDB = PyFile_AsFile(pyDB);
long offset = 0;
DB_HEADER *pdbHeader = malloc(sizeof(DB_HEADER));
fseek(fhDB,offset,SEEK_SET); //at the beginning
fread(pdbHeader, 1, sizeof(DB_HEADER), fhDB );
if (ferror(fhDB)){
fclose(fhDB);
Py_DECREF(pyDB);
PyErr_SetString(PyExc_IOError, "failed reading database header");
return NULL;
}
Py_DECREF(pyDB);
PyObject *pyDBHeader = PyDict_New();
Py_INCREF(pyDBHeader);
o=PyInt_FromLong(pdbHeader->version_number);
PyDict_SetItemString(pyDBHeader, "version", o);
Py_DECREF(o);
PyObject *pyTimeList = PyList_New(0);
Py_INCREF(pyTimeList);
int i;
for (i=0; i<NUM_DRAWERS; i++){
//epochs
o=PyInt_FromLong(pdbHeader->last_good_test[i]);
PyList_Append(pyTimeList, o);
Py_DECREF(o);
}
PyDict_SetItemString(pyDBHeader, "lastTest", pyTimeList);
Py_DECREF(pyTimeList);
o=PyInt_FromLong(pdbHeader->temp);
PyDict_SetItemString(pyDBHeader, "temp", o);
Py_DECREF(o);
free(pdbHeader);
return (pyDBHeader);
}
Thanks for taking a look,
LarsenMTL
PyDict_New()
returns a new reference, check the docs for PyDict
. So if you increase the refcount immediately after creating it, you have two references to it. One is transferred to the caller when you return it as a result value, but the other one never goes aways.
You also don't need to incref pyTimeList
. It's yours when you create it. However, you need to decref it, but you only decref it once, so it's leaked as well.
You also don't need to call Py_INCREF
on pyDB
. It's a borrowed reference and it won't go away as long as your function does not return, because it's still referenced in a lower stack frame.
Only if you want to keep the reference in another structure somewhere, you need to increse the refcount.
Cf. the API docs
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