I have a WCF REST service, hosted in IIS. Clients (primarily browsers) have been complaining about occasional hangs. I finally experienced this myself, and was able to grab some debugging info from the server. I grabbed the following screenshot from the IIS management console.
Obviously these requests have all been around for far too long.
While these requests were hanging the server was able to handle other requests just fine. I recycled the app pools a few times, with no apparent effect. During this time any requests from my browser would just hang and then be timed out by the browser. Other browsers on my same machine were able to connect to the same service with no problems. I also fired up Fiddler, and then was able to make requests from my "hung" browser through Fiddler. When I shut down Fiddler the browser became "hung" again. When I finally closed the browser entirely, the connections went away.
One potentially important point: you can't tell in the screenshot but the requests are all hanging on calls that send binary streams (photos & videos) to the client. Under the covers I'm opening a Stream from Azure Blob Storage (using OpenRead()) and then returning that same Stream from my functions. So I'm reading over the network on one side, and pumping the data out to the network on the other side.
So what's going on here? How can I prevent the connections from hanging, or at least make them time out at some reasonable point?
UPDATE: It appears that the browsers may be the problem. If I have an HTML5 <video>
element on the page, and the video is big enough, the browser seems to open a connection to download the file and hold it open forever. I'm only about 75% sure about that, but I'll add an update here if/when I find out for sure.