I'm finding AQTime hard to use because it interferes with the original program too much. If I have a program that uses, for example, 300MB of ram I can use AQTime's allocation profiler without a problem, and find out where most of the memory is being used. However I notice that running under AQTime, the original program uses more like 1GB while it's being profiled.
Right now I'm trying to reduce memory usage in a program which is using 1.4GB of memory. If I run it under AQTime, then the original program uses all of the 2GB address space and crashes. I can of course invent a smaller set of test data and estimate how the memory usage will scale with the full data set - but the reason I'm using a profiler in the first place is to try to avoid this sort of guesswork.
I already have AQTime set to 'Collect stack information - None' and all the check boxes to do with checking memory integrity are switched off, and I've tried restricting the area being profiled to just a few classes but this doesn't seem to improve anything. Is there a way to use AQTime that produces a smaller overhead? Or failing that, what other approaches are there to get a good idea of the memory being used?
The app is written in Delphi 2010 and I'm using AQTime 6.
NB: On top of the increased memory usage, running under AQTime slows the app down an awful lot, making the whole exercise not just impossible but impractical too :-P