Thanks for the report, and sorry about the leak.

I've been porting the clock across to Qt.  When that's released we'll
evaluate it again and see Qt makes it easier to close leaks (or if their
libraries are tighter than GTK).

Drew

On Mon, 2011-12-05 at 16:42 -0700, Matt Fischer wrote:
> Package: gworldclock
> Version: 1.4.4-9
> 
> A user has reported that he's seeing a memory leak in gworldclock in
> Ubuntu, which is using version 1.4.4-9 from sid, unmodified.  I have
> confirmed that there is a leak. but have not tracked it down.  
> 
> Here is the report:
> 
> I've discovered a memory leak in gworldclock in Ubuntu 11.04
> (1.4.4-9ubuntu1). I measured it over time and found it leaks pretty
> steadily at a rate of about 450 to 500 KiB/h. I'll attach the graph
> below, but for now here are its config files:
> 
> > cat .gworldclock
> <?xml version="1.0"?>
> <gworldclock>
>   <timeDisplayFormat>%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S (%a)</timeDisplayFormat>
> </gworldclock>
> 
> > cat .tzlist
> UTC "UTC"
> America/Denver "Fort Collins"
> America/Sao_Paulo "Diogo"
> Europe/London "London"
> Asia/Shanghai "Beijing"
> Pacific/Auckland "Auckland"
> Europe/Budapest "Budapest"
> 
> For the graph and more details:
> https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/gworldclock/+bug/800027
> 
> 
> 





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