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Home/ Questions/Q 4612296
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 22, 20262026-05-22T01:23:02+00:00 2026-05-22T01:23:02+00:00

I have windows application I wrote. I installed it on virtual server (vmware) that

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I have windows application I wrote.
I installed it on virtual server (vmware) that holds windows server 2008 and for some reason the application getting bigger and bigger. I used perfmon in order to see maybe there is a memory leak – but as I understand, there isn’t:
perfmon

Here is the proccess in task manager:
task manager

There are also two proccesses that use a lot of memory and cpu but are steady and not growing like SimeserManager.exe.

The memory growing slows the surfing on sited that this server holds.
Before this week I used the my application on phizical server with windows server 2003 and there were no problem with surfing. I can’t restore the situtaion in the phizical machine since I don’t have it anymore, but I don’t believe there was memory error when using the phizical server.

The application is written in c# .net using visual studio 2010.

What can be the problem?
Where can I get some clues?

UPDATE
I get ANTS memory profiler and tried to seek for the problem. I created memory snapshots and here is the results:
ANTS memory profiler

Now I’m really lost.
I tryed the standart filters but didn’t manage to find a clue for the problem. In the image you can see there is increase in the private bytes. Does that sais there is a memory leak?

Can anyone give me some clues how to continue?

Thanks!

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-22T01:23:02+00:00Added an answer on May 22, 2026 at 1:23 am

    We don’t have enough information here to really debug your application. However, there are tools you can use to identify and solve this issue in your application. I would suggest you use the ANTS Memory Profiler from RedGate to help you look for your problem. Here is a link to it:

    http://www.red-gate.com/products/dotnet-development/ants-memory-profiler/

    It isn’t free but it is cheap and extremely effective. Get the 14-day free trial and run it on your application. I would go as far as to say that if it doesn’t find the issue, the issue probably isn’t with your application.

    As for the other processes that are taking a lot of memory, this is normal. SQL Server tries to get as much memory as possible. Running other applications on the same box as a SQL server may cause you performance issues if you aren’t careful. Here is a good article on how SQL Server uses memory:

    http://sqlblog.com/blogs/jonathan_kehayias/archive/2009/08/24/troubleshooting-the-sql-server-memory-leak-or-understanding-sql-server-memory-usage.aspx

    As for IIS memory usage (the other process that was using lots of memory), there could be multiple reasons for this. I would suggest you read through this forum to get a better idea of what it could be (if it truly is an issue):

    http://forums.iis.net/t/1150494.aspx

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