When is it acceptable to call GC.Collect?

I use GC.Collect only when writing crude performance/profiler test rigs; i.e. I have two (or more) blocks of code to test - something like:

GC.Collect(GC.MaxGeneration, GCCollectionMode.Forced);
TestA(); // may allocate lots of transient objects
GC.Collect(GC.MaxGeneration, GCCollectionMode.Forced);
TestB(); // may allocate lots of transient objects
GC.Collect(GC.MaxGeneration, GCCollectionMode.Forced);
...

So that TestA() and TestB() run with as similar state as possible - i.e. TestB() doesn't get hammered just because TestA left it very close to the tipping point.

A classic example would be a simple console exe (a Main method sort-enough to be posted here for example), that shows the difference between looped string concatenation and StringBuilder.

If I need something precise, then this would be two completely independent tests - but often this is enough if we just want to minimize (or normalize) the GC during the tests to get a rough feel for the behaviour.

During production code? I have yet to use it ;-p


The best practise is to not force a garbage collection in most cases. (Every system I have worked on that had forced garbage collections, had underlining problems that if solved would have removed the need to forced the garbage collection, and speeded the system up greatly.)

There are a few cases when you know more about memory usage then the garbage collector does. This is unlikely to be true in a multi user application, or a service that is responding to more then one request at a time.

However in some batch type processing you do know more then the GC. E.g. consider an application that.

  • Is given a list of file names on the command line
  • Processes a single file then write the result out to a results file.
  • While processing the file, creates a lot of interlinked objects that can not be collected until the processing of the file have complete (e.g. a parse tree)
  • Does not keep match state between the files it has processed.

You may be able to make a case (after careful) testing that you should force a full garbage collection after you have process each file.

Another cases is a service that wakes up every few minutes to process some items, and does not keep any state while it’s asleep. Then forcing a full collection just before going to sleep may be worthwhile.

The only time I would consider forcing a collection is when I know that a lot of object had been created recently and very few objects are currently referenced.

I would rather have a garbage collection API when I could give it hints about this type of thing without having to force a GC my self.

See also "Rico Mariani's Performance Tidbits"


These days I consider same of the above cases would be better to use a short lived worker process to do each batch of work and let the OS do the resource recovery.


If you have good reason to believe that a significant set of objects - particularly those you suspect to be in generations 1 and 2 - are now eligible for garbage collection, and that now would be an appropriate time to collect in terms of the small performance hit.

A good example of this is if you've just closed a large form. You know that all the UI controls can now be garbage collected, and a very short pause as the form is closed probably won't be noticeable to the user.

UPDATE 2.7.2018

As of .NET 4.5 - there is GCLatencyMode.LowLatency and GCLatencyMode.SustainedLowLatency. When entering and leaving either of these modes, it is recommended that you force a full GC with GC.Collect(2, GCCollectionMode.Forced).

As of .NET 4.6 - there is the GC.TryStartNoGCRegion method (used to set the read-only value GCLatencyMode.NoGCRegion). This can itself, perform a full blocking garbage collection in an attempt to free enough memory, but given we are disallowing GC for a period, I would argue it is also a good idea to perform full GC before and after.

Source: Microsoft engineer Ben Watson's: Writing High-Performance .NET Code, 2nd Ed. 2018.

See:

  • https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/system.runtime.gclatencymode(v=vs.110).aspx
  • https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/dn906204(v=vs.110).aspx