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Reasons for java.sql.SQLException: Closed Connection from Oracle??

java.sql.SQLException: Closed Connection at oracle.jdbc.driver.DatabaseError.throwSqlException(DatabaseError.java:112) at oracle.jdbc.driver.DatabaseError.throwSqlException(DatabaseError.java:146) at oracle.jdbc.driver.DatabaseError.throwSqlException(DatabaseError.java:208) at oracle.jdbc.driver.PhysicalConnection.commit(PhysicalConnection.java:1131) at oracle.jdbc.OracleConnectionWrapper.commit(OracleConnectionWrapper.java:117)

We are getting this error from the fail over database connection. We use the same code for other databases as well. But seeing this issue with only one of the databases. Is this because the connection might have timeout due to long inactivity period and we are trying to use that? Pls let me know if you need more details...

AbandonedConnectionTimeout set to 15 mins InactivityTimeout set to 30 mins

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1 Answer

up vote 3 down vote accepted

It means the connection was successfully established at some point, but when you tried to commit right there, the connection was no longer open. The parameters you mentioned sound like connection pool settings. If so, they're unrelated to this problem. The most likely cause is a firewall between you and the database that is killing connections after a certain amount of idle time. The most common fix is to make your connection pool run a validation query when a connection is checked out from it. This will immediately identify and evict dead connnections, ensuring that you only get good connections out of the pool.

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thanks for the answer. Does the validation connection property add any overhead? I am seeing this only with one of the DB, I too doubt something wrong with that paticular DB. – Java Guy Jul 24 '11 at 6:09
1  
It will naturally add some overhead, as it has to actually hit the database in order to validate the connection; however, each database has a recommended "validation query" to use that incurs minimal overhead on the database side, so the only slowdown you'll get is from whatever network latency there is. Regardless of the problem, adding a validation query is a pretty foolproof way to avoid getting dead connections from the pool. I believe the current recommended query for Oracle is select 1 from dual – Ryan Stewart Jul 25 '11 at 16:33

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