memory_get_peak_usage() with "real usage"

PhpMemoryMemory Management

Php Problem Overview


If the real_usage argument is set to true the PHP DOCS say it will get the real size of memory allocated from system. If it's false it will get the memory reported by emalloc()

Which one of these 2 options returns the max. memory allocated relative to the memory limit value in php.ini ?

I want to know how close was the script to hit that limit.

Php Solutions


Solution 1 - Php

Ok, lets test this using a simple script:

ini_set('memory_limit', '1M');
$x = '';
while(true) {
  echo "not real: ".(memory_get_peak_usage(false)/1024/1024)." MiB\n";
  echo "real: ".(memory_get_peak_usage(true)/1024/1024)." MiB\n\n";
  $x .= str_repeat(' ', 1024*25); //store 25kb more to string
}

Output:

not real: 0.73469543457031 MiB
real: 0.75 MiB

not real: 0.75910949707031 MiB
real: 1 MiB

...

not real: 0.95442199707031 MiB
real: 1 MiB

not real: 0.97883605957031 MiB
real: 1 MiB

PHP Fatal error:  Allowed memory size of 1048576 bytes exhausted (tried to allocate 793601 bytes) in /home/niko/test.php on line 7

Seems like real usage is the memory allocated from the system - which seems to get allocated in larger buckets than currently needed by the script. (I guess for performance reasons). This is also the memory the php process uses.

The $real_usage = false usage is the memory usage you actually used in your script, not the actual amount of memory allocated by Zend's memory manager.

Read this question for more information.

In short: to get how close are you to the memory limit, use $real_usage = true

Solution 2 - Php

Introduction

You should use memory_get_usage(false) because what you want is memory used not memory allocated.

What's the Difference

Your Google Mail might have allocated 25MB of storage for you but it does not mean that is what you have used at the moment.

This is exactly what the PHP doc was saying

>Set this to TRUE to get the real size of memory allocated from system. If not set or FALSE only the memory used by emalloc() is reported.

Both arguments would return memory allocated relative to the memory limit but the main difference is:

memory_get_usage(false) give the memory used by emalloc() while memory_get_usage(true) returns milestone which can be demonstration here Memory Mile Store

I want to know how close was the script to hit that limit.

That would take some maths and might only work in loops or specific use cases. Why do I say that?

Imagine

ini_set('memory_limit', '1M');
$data = str_repeat(' ', 1024 * 1024);

The above script would fail before you even get the chance to start start checking memory.

As far as I know the only way I can check memory used for a variable or specific section of PHP is:

$start_memory = memory_get_usage();
$foo = "Some variable";
echo memory_get_usage() - $start_memory;

See Explanation, but if you are in a loop or recursive function you can use maximum memory usage to estimate safely when memory peak would be reached.

Example

ini_set('memory_limit', '1M');

$memoryAvailable = filter_var(ini_get("memory_limit"), FILTER_SANITIZE_NUMBER_INT);
$memoryAvailable = $memoryAvailable * 1024 * 1024;

$peakPoint = 90; // 90%

$memoryStart = memory_get_peak_usage(false);
$memoryDiff = 0;

// Some stats
$stat = array(
		"HIGHEST_MEMORY" => 0,
		"HIGHEST_DIFF" => 0,
		"PERCENTAGE_BREAK" => 0,
		"AVERAGE" => array(),
		"LOOPS" => 0
);

$data = "";
$i = 0;
while ( true ) {
	$i ++;
	
	// Get used memory
	$memoryUsed = memory_get_peak_usage(false);
	
	// Get Difference
	$memoryDiff = $memoryUsed - $memoryStart;
	
	// Start memory Usage again
	$memoryStart = memory_get_peak_usage(false);
	
	// Gather some stats
	$stat['HIGHEST_MEMORY'] = $memoryUsed > $stat['HIGHEST_MEMORY'] ? $memoryUsed : $stat['HIGHEST_MEMORY'];
	$stat['HIGHEST_DIFF'] = $memoryDiff > $stat['HIGHEST_DIFF'] ? $memoryDiff : $stat['HIGHEST_DIFF'];
	$stat['AVERAGE'][] = $memoryDiff;
	$stat['LOOPS'] ++;
	$percentage = (($memoryUsed + $stat['HIGHEST_DIFF']) / $memoryAvailable) * 100;
	
	// var_dump($percentage, $memoryDiff);
	
	// Stop your script
	if ($percentage > $peakPoint) {
		
		print(sprintf("Stoped at: %0.2f", $percentage) . "%\n");
		$stat['AVERAGE'] = array_sum($stat['AVERAGE']) / count($stat['AVERAGE']);
		$stat = array_map(function ($v) {
			return sprintf("%0.2f", $v / (1024 * 1024));
		}, $stat);
		$stat['LOOPS'] = $i;
		$stat['PERCENTAGE_BREAK'] = sprintf("%0.2f", $percentage) . "%";
		echo json_encode($stat, 128);
		break;
	}
	
	$data .= str_repeat(' ', 1024 * 25); // 1kb every time
}

Output

Stoped at: 95.86%
{
    "HIGHEST_MEMORY": "0.71",
    "HIGHEST_DIFF": "0.24",
    "PERCENTAGE_BREAK": "95.86%",
    "AVERAGE": "0.04",
    "LOOPS": 11
}

Live Demo

This may still fail

It may fail because after if ($percentage > $peakPoint) { this still still add to do additional task with also consumes memory

		print(sprintf("Stoped at: %0.2f", $percentage) . "%\n");
		$stat['AVERAGE'] = array_sum($stat['AVERAGE']) / count($stat['AVERAGE']);
		$stat = array_map(function ($v) {
			return sprintf("%0.2f", $v / (1024 * 1024));
		}, $stat);
		$stat['LOOPS'] = $i;
		$stat['PERCENTAGE_BREAK'] = sprintf("%0.2f", $percentage) . "%";
		echo json_encode($stat, 128);
		break;

If the memory to process this request is greater than the memory available the script would fail.

Conclusion

It's not a perfect solution, but check for memory at intervals and if it exceeds the peak (eg 90%), exit instantly and leave the fancy stuff

Solution 3 - Php

real_usage false reports the usage your script used. This will be the more accurate of the two.

real_usage true reports the memory allocated to your script. This will be the higher of the two.

I'd probably use true if I was trying to compare, as your script would never be allocated more than memory limit, and would continue to run as long as it (plus all other scripts) didn't exceed that usage.

Solution 4 - Php

as per PHP memory_get_usage

> real_usage > > Set this to TRUE to get total memory allocated from system, including unused pages. If not set or FALSE only the used memory is reported.

so to get the memory used by your script you should use memory_get_usage() as default real_usage is false.

if you want to get the memory allocated by the system but don't care how much was actually used, use memory_get_usage(true);

Solution 5 - Php

<!-- Print CPU memory and load -->
<?php
$output = shell_exec('free');
$data = substr($output,111,19);
echo $data;
echo file_get_contents('/proc/loadavg');
$load = sys_getloadavg();
$res = implode("",$load);
echo $res;
?>

Attributions

All content for this solution is sourced from the original question on Stackoverflow.

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Content TypeOriginal AuthorOriginal Content on Stackoverflow
QuestionthelolcatView Question on Stackoverflow
Solution 1 - PhpNiko SamsView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 2 - PhpBabaView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 3 - PhpGlitch DesireView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 4 - PhpTofeeqView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 5 - PhpRahul RohewalView Answer on Stackoverflow