6

I have been experiencing (I think) issues with my connection pooling. Specifically, my logs show the message:

org.apache.tomcat.dbcp.pool2.impl.DefaultPooledObject$AbandonedObjectCreatedException: Pooled object created [time] by the following code has not been returned to the pool

I have inspected the methods listed in the stack trace that the logs show but couldn't find a culprit (I always close the ResultSet, PreparedStatement and Connection at the end of each method).

I have a method that executes two queries, perhaps I am not executing it properly.

It's layout is as follows:

ConnectionPool pool = ConnectionPool.getInstance();
Connection connection = pool.getConnection();
PreparedStatement ps = null;
PreparedStatement rowsPs = null;
ResultSet rs = null;
ResultSet rowsRs = null;

String query = "SELECT SQL_CALC_FOUND_ROWS ...";
String totalRowsQuery = "SELECT FOUND_ROWS() AS RowCount";

try {
    ps = connection.prepareStatement(query);
    [set ps params]
    rs = ps.executeQuery();
    [process rs]

    rowsPs = connection.prepareStatement(totalRowsQuery);
    rowsRs = rowsPs.executeQuery();
    [process rowsRs]
} catch (SQLException e) {
    [handle e]
} finally {
    DBUtil.closeResultSet(rs);
    [close rowsRs]
    [close ps]
    [close rowsPs]
    [close connection]
}

Where an example of a DBUtils method is:

public static void closeResultSet(ResultSet rs)
{
    try
    {
        if (rs != null)
            rs.close();
    }
    catch (SQLException sqle)
    {
        sqle.printStackTrace();
    }
}

Does the general layout of this method seem ok? Should I be handling the connection differently? Or is it some other method that's causing the errors to be logged?

Thank you.

Additional Info

I also get a SQLException:

java.sql.SQLException: Connection com.mysql.jdbc.JDBC4Connection@[some number] is closed

at the line: rowsPs = connection.prepareStatement(totalRowsQuery);

Meaning that somewhere prior, the connection is closed. I don't explicitly close the connection anywhere. Is it possible that some other data accessing method that is called is somehow closing the connection in this method? (pool.getConnection() calls dataSource.getConnection())

Update: I have tried using try-with-resources as suggested but the issue persists.

The ConnectionPool class that is referenced in the first code snippet above:

public class ConnectionPool 
{

    private static ConnectionPool pool = null;
    private static DataSource dataSource = null;

    public synchronized static ConnectionPool getInstance()
    {

        if ( pool == null ) {
            pool = new ConnectionPool();
        }
            return pool;
    }

    private ConnectionPool()
    {
        try {
            InitialContext ic = new InitialContext();
            dataSource = (DataSource) 
                    ic.lookup([jdbc/dbName]);
        }

        catch (Exception e) {
            e.printStackTrace();
        } 
    }

    public Connection getConnection()
    {
        try {
            return dataSource.getConnection();
        }
        catch (SQLException sqle) {
            sqle.printStackTrace();
            return null;
        }
    }
    public void freeConnection(Connection c)
    { 
        try {
            c.close();
        }
        catch (SQLException sqle) {
            sqle.printStackTrace();
        }
    }
}

More source: My Pool Resource Element:

<Resource auth="Container" driverClassName="com.mysql.jdbc.Driver"  
            logAbandoned="true" maxActive="100" maxIdle="30" maxWait="10000" 
            removeAbandonedOnBorrow="true" 
            removeAbandonedTimeout="60" type="javax.sql.DataSource" 
            testWhileIdle="true" testOnBorrow="true" 
            validationQuery="SELECT 1 AS dbcp_connection_test"/>

Update: I have turned on the slow query log but, despite the Exceptions being thrown again, the slow query log does not log anything (no query takes longer than 10 seconds).

So it appears that it in not that the query is taking longer than 60 seconds.

Still uncertain as to what is causing this.

21
  • 2
    What if a line in finally fails? No downstream lines will be executed. I'd just close the connection because all sane JDBC implementations will cascade-close all its associated resources. Oct 6, 2016 at 14:20
  • Ok, thanks. But it doesn't really get to the root of the problem. Do you see any reason why lines in that finally clause would fail?
    – theyuv
    Oct 6, 2016 at 14:27
  • Yes, each line may throw an exception. That sort of reason. Oct 6, 2016 at 14:31
  • I would see those exceptions in my log, no? I print them. All resources are closed via a util class that surrounds the statement in a try clause and prints the stacktrace if an exception is thrown.
    – theyuv
    Oct 6, 2016 at 14:36
  • A connection is obtained with pool.getConnection() and released with connection.close(), that's the pool's invariant. So you'd better find a reason why the line connection.close() is either not reached, or fails with an exception. Or, as an even more exotic explanation, the variable connection is reassigned and the original connection abandoned. Oct 6, 2016 at 14:40

4 Answers 4

3
+25

As general rules of thumb when working with pooled JDBC connections:

  1. Do not keep more than one ResultSet open at a time on each connection. Close the first ResultSet and its associated Statement before opening the second.

  2. Always close the resources in exactly the reverse order that you created them: create(s1)->execute(r1)->close(r1)->close(s1)->create(s2)->execute(r2)->close(r2)->close(s2)

  3. Ensure that a long running query processing is not exceeding the maximum connection lifetime allowed by the pool.

  4. Even if you are not exceeding the maximum connection lifetime, a connection can be lost because of small interruptions in the network link.

1
  • 1 and 2 I do. Regarding number 3: None of my queries take longer than 1-2 seconds. Can they ever take significantly more time than they take when I run them (they are based on my server performance and not the client's, right)?Regarding number 4: it seems to always be happening as a result of the same method, which leads me to think it's not just some random interuption.
    – theyuv
    Oct 26, 2016 at 17:46
2

Does the mysql server timeout the connections? It could also be a kernel thing, if the connection is idle for a long time the underlying tcp connection might get killed.

2

These 2 lines take 60+ seconds, so connection pool decides your connection is abandoned and closes it. Later your code tries to use connection, but it's already called off by connection pool.

rs = ps.executeQuery();
[process rs]

As you are sure it's not long executeQuery(), make debug printing with connection/thread/request id and time for [process rs] part. If you see something like 50+ seconds for this part, you should optimize [process rs] or read data and stash them in memory before processing.

1

Try reducing removeAbandonedTimeout value to something like 20 or 15. Your maxWait is 10 seconds, but if the connections are getting abandoned, then you are waiting for 60 seconds before returning them.

Please note, this is not a solution, but just a test to see if your connections are actually hanging.

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