I know many have discussed this before and agreed that Httpclient is best to be instantiated once and used for the entire application. I have some inquiries about this point.
Let's say i have a business layer class with static Httpclient variable (with double check lock) and a web page creates an object of the business layer class.
Class code:
public class BL
{
//Lock object for double lock check
private static readonly object padlock = new object();
public static HttpClient httpClient;
public BL()
{
if (httpClient == null)
{
lock (padlock)
{
if (httpClient == null)
{
httpClient = new HttpClient();
}
}
}
}
public async Task<HttpResponseMessage> GetData(String URL)
{
return await httpClient.GetAsync(URL).ConfigureAwait(false);
}
}
Page code
protected void Page_Load(object sender, EventArgs e)
{
BL blObj = new BL();
HttpResponseMessage response = blObj.GetData("http://....");
}
Static variables keep alive for the whole application lifetime. That means the static httpclient will be alive as long as the host IIS and web app are alive (even after the lifecycle of the page that created BL object ends) or just alive till page is disposed?
If multiple concurrent pages e.g 500 created BL object and used the static httpclient, how 500 users will be served through just one static httpclient that only enables one http connection with the server? I can't get that one.
Is there a reliable visual studio tool to test load and performance of the above code?
public static HttpClient httpClient = new HttpClient()