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Given an aggregation of class instances which refer to each other in a complex, circular, fashion: is it possible that the garbage collector may not be able to free these objects?

I vaguely recall this being an issue in the JVM in the past, but I thought this was resolved years ago. yet, some investigation in jhat has revealed a circular reference being the reason for a memory leak that I am now faced with.

Note: I have always been under the impression that the JVM was capable of resolving circular references and freeing such "islands of garbage" from memory. However, I am posing this question just to see if anyone has found any exceptions.

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Only a very naive implementation would have a problem with circular references. Wikipedia has a good article on the different GC algorithms. If you really want to learn more, try (Amazon) Garbage Collection: Algorithms for Automatic Dynamic Memory Management . Java has had a good garbage collector since 1.2 and an exceptionally good one in 1.5 and Java 6.

The hard part for improving GC is reducing pauses and overhead, not basic things like circular reference.


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