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Asked: May 11, 20262026-05-11T03:35:11+00:00 2026-05-11T03:35:11+00:00

I am working on a web app using C# and asp.net I have been

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I am working on a web app using C# and asp.net I have been receiving an out of memory exception. What the app does is read a bunch of records(products) from a data source, could be hundreds/thousands, processes those records through settings in a wizard and then updates a different data source with the processes product information. Although there are multiple DB classes, right now all the logic is in one big class. The only reason for this, is all the information has to do with one thing, a product. Would it help the memory if I divided my app into different classes?? I don’t think it would because if I divided the business logic into two classes, both of the classes would remain alive the entire time sending messages to each other, and so I don’t know how this would help. I guess my other solution would be to find out what’s sucking up all the memory. Is there a good tool you could recommend??

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  1. 2026-05-11T03:35:11+00:00Added an answer on May 11, 2026 at 3:35 am

    Are you using datareaders to stream through your data? (to avoid loading too much into memory)

    My gut is telling me this is a trivial issue to fix, don’t pump datatables with 1 million records, work through tables one row at a time, or in small batches … Release and dispose objects when you are done with them. (Example: don’t have static List<Customer> allCustomers = AllCustomers())
    Have a development rule that ensures no one reads tables into memory if there are more than X amount of rows involved.

    If you need a tool to debug this look at .net memory profiler or windbg with the sos extension both will allow you to sniff through your your managed heaps.

    Another note is, if you care about maintainability and would like to reduce your defect count, get rid of the SuperDuperDoEverything class and model information correctly in a way that is better aligned with your domain. The SuperDuperDoEverything class is a bomb waiting to explode.

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