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Home/ Questions/Q 416341
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 12, 20262026-05-12T18:28:15+00:00 2026-05-12T18:28:15+00:00

-(void)invokeMethod { NSMethodSignature * sig = [[source class] instanceMethodSignatureForSelector:@selector(mySelector:)]; NSInvocation * invocation = [NSInvocation

  • 0
-(void)invokeMethod
{
    NSMethodSignature * sig = [[source class] instanceMethodSignatureForSelector:@selector(mySelector:)];
    NSInvocation * invocation = [NSInvocation invocationWithMethodSignature:sig];

    [invocation setTarget:myTarget];
    [invocation setSelector:@selector(mySelector:)];

    MySubClassOfNSInvocationOperation * command = [[[MySubClassOfNSInvocationOperation alloc] initWithInvocation:invocation] autorelease];

    //setArgument retains command
    [invocation setArgument:&command atIndex:2];

    //addOperation retains command until the selector is finished executing
    [operationQueue addOperation:command];
}


-(void)mySelector:(MySubClassOfNSInvocation*)command
{
    //Do stuff
}

I don’t know exactly what is happening, but NSInvocation & MySubClassOfNSInvocationOperation are leaking

When I remove the line:

[invocation setArgument:&command atIndex:2];

It doesn’t leak, so some kind of problem with passing command as an argument.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-12T18:28:15+00:00Added an answer on May 12, 2026 at 6:28 pm

    You probably have a reference counted loop… a situation where command retains invocation and invocation retains command and neither wants to release until their own dealloc method — leading to a situation where they never get freed.

    You need to decide which of the two is hierarchically senior to the other and make sure that the junior object does not retain the senior. Incidentally — NSInvocation won’t retain arguments unless you call retainArguments. Alternately, you can implement a close method, manually telling one to release the other, breaking the cycle.

    I wrote the post “Rules to avoid retain cycles” after uncovering this exact issue with NSInvocation in one of my own projects.

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