
Hi Eliot, Our best guess is that it is possible to have some accumulated memory for storing the changes needed for the undo operations. If you go from the Text mode to Author mode and make some changes then go back in Text mode, go to Author and so on then there is possible to accumulate an important amount of memory for storing the information needed to perform undo operations. Thus the suggestion that Sorin made earlier was to try to limit the undo buffer by enabling the options "Clear undo buffer before Format and Indent" (Preferences -> Editor -> Format) and "Clear undo buffer on save" (Preferences -> Editor -> Open/Save). Please try the same thing and see if you still get OutOfMemory errors? You can also try increasing the memory to 300, 400, 500 MB. In Help->About there is a "JVM Memory Used" label that shows the amount of memory used by oXygen and the total available memory. You can try to perform a File->Close All action on the editors (after you worked for a few hours but before getting an OutOfMemory error) and then go in the Help->About dialog and click on that label (that will run the Java garbage collector) and then see how much memory is used by oXygen. If that is around 30-80MB then it should be ok. Best Regards, George -- George Cristian Bina <oXygen/> XML Editor, Schema Editor and XSLT Editor/Debugger http://www.oxygenxml.com Eliot Kimber wrote:
On 5/18/08 8:09 AM, "Jacques Foucry" <jacques@foucry.net> wrote:
Hello,
Using oXygen for a long time under Mac OS X, the new version (9.2) have more memory errors than previous version.
I can't quantify my experience but it does seem like 9.2 has more performance issues after I've opened a few files than I remember with 9.1. But that could as easily be because I'm using it more, or using Author mode more, than I have before. I did set the VM to 256m for Oxygen 9.2. The last couple of weeks I've been focused on primarily heads-down authoring of documentation, making heavy use of the DITA features and Author mode and I have had a couple of times where I started getting out of memory errors when it didn't seem like I had opened that many documents (but it's hard to know what I had really done over the course of day).
Is there a way to get better measurements or instrument Oxygen to prove or disprove this impression?
Cheers,
Eliot