10

Consider the following simple Node.js application:

var http = require('http');
http.createServer(function() { }).listen(8124); // Prevent process shutting down

var requestNo = 1;
var maxRequests = 2000;

function requestTest() {
    http.request({ host: 'www.google.com', method: 'GET' }, function(res) {
        console.log('Completed ' + (requestNo++));

        if (requestNo <= maxRequests) {
            requestTest();
        }
    }).end();
}

requestTest();

It makes 2000 HTTP requests to google.com, one after the other. The problem is it gets to request No. 5 and pauses for about 3 mins, then continues processing requests 6 - 10, then pauses for another 3 minutes, then requests 11 - 15, pauses, and so on. Edit: I tried changing www.google.com to localhost, an extremely basic Node.js app running my machine that returns "Hello world", I still get the 3 minute pause.

Now I read I can increase the connection pool limit:

http.globalAgent.maxSockets = 20;

Now if I run it, it processes requests 1 - 20, then pauses for 3 mins, then requests 21 - 40, then pauses, and so on.

Finally, after a bit of research, I learned I could disable connection pooling entirely by setting agent: false in the request options:

http.request({ host: 'www.google.com', method: 'GET', agent: false }, function(res) {
    ...snip....

...and it'll run through all 2000 requests just fine.

My question, is it a good idea to do this? Is there a danger that I could end up with too many HTTP connections? And why does it pause for 3 mins, surely if I've finished with the connection it should add it straight back into the pool ready for the next request to use, so why is it waiting 3 mins? Forgive my ignorance.

Failing that, what is the best strategy for a Node.js app making a potentially large number HTTP requests, without locking up, or crashing?

I'm running Node.js version 0.10 on Mac OSX 10.8.2.


Edit: I've found if I convert the above code into a for loop and try to establish a bunch of connections at the same time, I start getting errors after about 242 connections. The error is:

Error was thrown: connect EMFILE
(libuv) Failed to create kqueue (24)

...and the code...

for (var i = 1; i <= 2000; i++) {
    (function(requestNo) {
        var request = http.request({ host: 'www.google.com', method: 'GET', agent: false }, function(res) {
            console.log('Completed ' + requestNo);
        });

        request.on('error', function(e) {
            console.log(e.name + ' was thrown: ' + e.message);
        });

        request.end();
    })(i);
}

I don't know if a heavily loaded Node.js app could ever reach that many simultaneous connections.

5
  • 1
    You're running out of file descriptors, which on OSX are limited to a rather low 256 by default. You can increase that number using ulimit -n 2048, which would allow a subsequent Node process run from the same shell to open those 2000 connections to Google at the same time, but that's not really what you want I think. I'm not sure where the 3 minutes is coming from, sounds like a throttling-thing in the connection pool (or perhaps Google is throttling you?).
    – robertklep
    Mar 20, 2013 at 21:00
  • Thanks for the info on the OSX file descriptors, makes a bit more sense. I guess it wouldn't be a problem on a live site running on Linux. But as for the 3 min wait thing, I get that if I hit a locally running Node.js web app on my machine. Mar 20, 2013 at 21:28
  • 1
    Reading this, I wonder if the 3 minute timeout is the keep-alive timeout for the Google servers (although if I understand the docs correctly, as long as you keep requesting, it shouldn't wait for those keep-alives to expire before starting a new request...)
    – robertklep
    Mar 20, 2013 at 22:01
  • robertklep - see edit above but I tried changing www.google.com to localhost, an extremely basic Node.js app running my machine that returns "Hello world", I still get the 3 minute pause. Mar 20, 2013 at 23:15
  • my guess is that 3 minutes come from memory allocation Jan 24, 2014 at 1:06

1 Answer 1

19

You have to consume the response.

Remember, in v0.10, we landed streams2. That means that data events don't happen until you start looking for them. So, you can do stuff like this:

http.createServer(function(req, res) {
  // this does some I/O, async
  // in 0.8, you'd lose data chunks, or even the 'end' event!
  lookUpSessionInDb(req, function(er, session) {
    if (er) {
      res.statusCode = 500;
      res.end("oopsie");
    } else {
      // no data lost
      req.on('data', handleUpload);
      // end event didn't fire while we were looking it up
      req.on('end', function() {
        res.end('ok, got your stuff');
      });
    }
  });
});

However, the flip side of streams that don't lose data when you're not reading it, is that they actually don't lose data if you're not reading it! That is, they start out paused, and you have to read them to get anything out.

So, what's happening in your test is that you're making a bunch of requests and not consuming the responses, and then eventually the socket gets killed by google because nothing is happening, and it assumes you've died.

There are some cases where it's impossible to consume the incoming message: that is, if you don't add a response event handler on a requests, or where you completely write and finish the response message on a server without ever reading the request. In those cases, we just dump the data in the garbage for you.

However, if you are listening to the 'response' event, it's your responsibility to handle the object. Add a response.resume() in your first example, and you'll see it processes on through at a reasonable pace.

3
  • 2
    Sweet, thanks for that! Yeah, "response.resume()" works. And, as you say, just consuming the response with "response.on('data', function() { })" also works. Also, just calling "this.destroy()" in the callback seems to work as well. Mar 21, 2013 at 9:26
  • I would also add that this isn't made very clear in the documentation nodejs.org/api/http.html#http_http_request_options_callback - but probably understandable if this is new behaviour bought about by streams2 and 0.10 has only just been released. Mar 21, 2013 at 9:32
  • Where does the http.request happen in this code solution? What does the full code look like in other words?
    – TetraDev
    Oct 23, 2015 at 15:23

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