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DA0023: High GC CPU time

Applies to: yesVisual Studio noVisual Studio for Mac

Note

This article applies to Visual Studio 2017. If you're looking for the latest Visual Studio documentation, see Visual Studio documentation. We recommend upgrading to the latest version of Visual Studio. Download it here

Item Value
Rule Id DA0023
Category .NET Framework Usage
Profiling method All
Message % Time in GC is fairly high. This indication of excessive amount of garbage collection overhead could be impacting the responsiveness of your application. You can gather .NET memory allocation data and object lifetime information to understand the pattern of memory allocation your application uses better.
Rule type Informational

When you profile by using the sampling, .NET memory, or resource contention methods, you must collect at least 10 samples to trigger this rule.

Cause

System performance data that is collected during profiling indicates that the amount of time that is spent in garbage collection is significant compared with the total application processing time.

Rule description

The Microsoft .NET common language run-time (CLR) provides an automatic memory management mechanism that uses a garbage collector to reclaim memory from objects that the application no longer uses. The garbage collector is generation-oriented, based on the assumption that many allocations are short-lived. Local variables, for example, should be short-lived. Newly created objects start in generation 0 (gen 0), and then they progress to generation 1 when they survive a garbage collection run, and finally transition to generation 2 if the application still uses them.

Objects in generation 0 are collected frequently and efficiently. Objects in generation 1 are collected less frequently and less efficiently. Finally, long-lived objects in generation 2 should be collected even less frequently. Generation 2 collection, which is a full garbage collection run, is also the most expensive operation.

This rule fires when the amount of time that is spent in garbage collection is significant compared with the total application processing time.

Note

When the proportion of time that is spent in garbage collection is excessive compared with the total application processing time, the DA0024: Excessive GC CPU Time warning fires instead of this rule.

How to investigate a warning

Double-click the message in the Errors List window to navigate to the Marks View of the profiling data. Find the .NET CLR Memory\% Time in GC column. Determine if there are specific phases of program execution where the overhead of managed memory garbage collection is heavier than other phases. Compare the values of the % Time in GC value to the rate of garbage collection reported in the # of Gen 0 Collections, # of Gen 1 Collections, # of Gen 2 Collections values.

The % Time in GC value tries to report the amount of time that an application spends performing garbage collection proportional to the total amount of processing. Be aware there are circumstances when the % Time in GC value can report a high value, but it is not because of excessive garbage collection. For more information about the way the % Time in GC value is calculated, see the Difference Between Perf Data Reported by Different Tools - 4 entry of Maoni's Weblog on MSDN. If page faults are occurring or the application is preempted by other higher priority work on the machine during garbage collection, the % Time in GC counter will reflect those additional delays.