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I am running on Windows 10 with the latest fixes and on Photoshop 23.0.1. System has 64GB of memory
I have been doctering some old, very dirty slides using the Spot Healing Brush. On some images this could involve a few thousand small corrections. On loading and with an image open, Photoshop uses a working set of approximately 4GB. I repair the image at 100% magnification. After repairing the image the working set can be as high as 25GB. But when resizing to screen size there can be a response time of many seconds and the working set can go as high as 50GB. While waiting I can see the memory ramping up in the monitor. When the image resizes, the background is the same as when Photoshop opens the first time, rather than a black background.
When the image is closed, the working set still remains at the same level. If I try to open a second image, the response time is very slow. Generally I have to close Photoshop and reopen it.
This situation repeats regularly, so it is not a one-off situation.
The information was gathered using the Resourse Monitor.
Go to Preferences > Technology Previews... and check "Disable Native Canvas" - then restart Photoshop. Does the problem still occur?
I can't say that I know how Windows provides memory to an application, but I suspect that if a large amount is requested, the memory is already fragmented.
My experience of the Photoshop usage of memory is limited to what I have seen in the last few days. I was cleaning a number of scammed images, doing practically the same operation to each. In the course of processing about 50 images there was a gradual increase in memory used of approximately 10 to 20 MB per image. To me this indicated that th
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Go to Preferences > Technology Previews... and check "Disable Native Canvas" - then restart Photoshop. Does the problem still occur?
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I ticked 'Deactivate native canvas'.
The memory is still increasing, but much more slowly than it was before. It is still not releasing the memory between images.
I have not reached the level of memory usage that triggered the rapid ramp up when fitting the image to screen. I will keep going and see if it happens.
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I'm not saying there isn't a problem here, but just to clarify the basic principles of normal operation:
Working at 100% is the right way to do it. But as long as you stay there, only that slice of the full data is processed, the rest sits passively on your scratch disk as history states.
If you ever see Photoshop using more RAM than the allocated limit, you have a problem. That's a memory leak, but they are usually caused by badly written third-party plugins.
So, again, I'm not saying there isn't something wrong in what you describe - but the above is the normal and expected behavior. Photoshop eats RAM and disk space, and you just have to expect that.
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I fully understand what you are saying. However I thought that any memory related to the image, rather than to the program, would be released when the image is closed. It will never be needed again.
I will continue to try to increase working storage to see if the problem when the 'fit to screen' reoccurs when the working storage gets to s certain level. This I would regard as a problem.
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It will never be needed again.
By @MMcN
As I said, it will be needed again. As long as the application is open, it will be reused for new images.
If you close Photoshop, it won't be needed again.
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I don't understand, but I would like to.
I can't see that the 'heals', or any of the history, that are applied to an image can be of any use when a new image is opened.
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Hello, if Photoshop releases a chunk of memory because an image is closed, and the OS grabs it, the memory is fragmented, this has been explained to slow down Photoshop.
That's why we've been told to prefer CTRL+J to jump a selection to its own layer, rather than a CTRL+C, CTRL+V, as it would shared with the OS's Clipboard.
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I can't say that I know how Windows provides memory to an application, but I suspect that if a large amount is requested, the memory is already fragmented.
My experience of the Photoshop usage of memory is limited to what I have seen in the last few days. I was cleaning a number of scammed images, doing practically the same operation to each. In the course of processing about 50 images there was a gradual increase in memory used of approximately 10 to 20 MB per image. To me this indicated that there was some memory reuse, but also that some memory was not being reused and extra memory is being requested.