programming A
leak in a program's dynamic store allocation logic that causes it to fail to reclaim memory in the
heap after it has finished using it, eventually causing the program to fail due to lack of memory.
These problems were severe on older machines with small, fixed-size address spaces, and special "leak detection" tools were written to diagnose them.
The introduction of
virtual memory made memory leaks a less serious problem, although if you run out of
virtual memory, it means you've got a *real* leak!
See
aliasing bug.
[
Jargon File]
(2003-10-07)