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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 13, 20262026-05-13T06:26:05+00:00 2026-05-13T06:26:05+00:00

I’m looking through a WPF application looking for a memory leak (using ANTS Memory

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I’m looking through a WPF application looking for a memory leak (using ANTS Memory Profiler 5.1) and I keep seeing some pages and controls taking up memory when they shouldn’t be.

So I go to the Object Retention Graph and to see what is keeping them around, and I keep seeing this for every page:

Object Retention Graph http://img683.imageshack.us/img683/3013/ants.jpg

The thing is, I have KeepAlive set to false on every page, and I don’t think such a property exists on the user controls.

Can anyone tell me what I should be looking for? Is this even a memory leak or is this normal behaviour for a WPF application?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-13T06:26:05+00:00Added an answer on May 13, 2026 at 6:26 am

    Yes, according to what you’ve provided, you have a memory leak. When you found the references chain, and it’s not in your code, the easiest way to go would be… Reflector.

    Image says: JournalEntryKeepAlive._keepAliveRoot field holds a reference to the object. Let’s go in Reflector and see how this guy is hooked with our object.

    This time it was easy, and all traces lead to NavigationService.MakeJournalEntry() function and then to NavigationService.IsContentKeepAlive(). Here it is:

    internal bool IsContentKeepAlive()
    {
        bool keepAlive = true;
        DependencyObject dependencyObject = this._bp as DependencyObject;
        if (dependencyObject != null)
        {
            keepAlive = JournalEntry.GetKeepAlive(dependencyObject);
            if (!keepAlive)
            {
                PageFunctionBase base2 = dependencyObject as PageFunctionBase;
                bool flag2 = !this.CanReloadFromUri;
                if ((base2 == null) && flag2)
                {
                    keepAlive = true;
                }
            }
        }
        return keepAlive;
    }
    

    Now you know the rules. Object is kept in memory if:

    • It’s not a dependency object;
    • Attached propery JournalEntry.KeepAlive is true;
    • It’s not a PageFunction and it can’t be reloaded from Uri.

    After this investigation it may be worth reading more about JournalEntry.KeepAlive property on MSDN.

    This strategy helped me to find many memory-related insects. Hope it helps you too :).

    PS: If you keep having problem with finding this particular leak, you could paste minimal code sample for us to reproduce it and give you more proper answer.

    Cheers,
    Anvaka

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