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We have a Spring 3 web application on Tomcat 6 that uses several scheduled services via @Scheduled (mainly for jobs that run every night). Now it appears that sometimes (rarely, perhaps once in two months or so) the scheduler thread stops working, so none of the jobs will be executed in the following night. There is no exception or logging entry in our log files.

Has anybody a clue why this is happening? Or how to get more information about this problem?

Is there a way to detect this situation within the application and to restart the scheduler?

Currently we are solving this by having also a logging job that runs every 5 minutes and creates a log entry. If the log file stops being updated (monitored by nagios), we know it is time to restart tomcat. It would be nice to restart the jobs without a complete server restart.

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  • 7
    What is the work being done in the scheduled tasks? Is it possible that something becomes stuck in an infinite loop? I ask because the scheduled tasks, by default, use a threadpool of 1 thread, and if it gets hung somehow, your future tasks will not be started (but I am sure they would be queued). Commented Jul 28, 2013 at 17:23
  • @nicholas.hauschild It calls an external REST webservice. So you are saying that such a request might possibly block (deadlock?) and therefore stop all other jobs. I think I will request a thread dump of the server if this happens again. Thanks for your input.
    – obecker
    Commented Jul 29, 2013 at 18:31
  • Taking a thread dump will probably be a good idea. Commented Jul 29, 2013 at 19:11
  • Things to consider 1 - Enforce a timeout on the call to the REST service. Maybe even spawn that call in a separate thread and kill it if there is no response within a specified time.
    – Steve
    Commented Nov 6, 2013 at 9:45
  • Things to consider 2 - Control scheduling from outside your web application. It tends to be more reliable/controllable that way. Maybe take a look at Spring Batch as a means of controlling and monitoring jobs.
    – Steve
    Commented Nov 6, 2013 at 9:46

3 Answers 3

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Since this question got so many votes, I'll post what the (probably very specific) solution to my problem was.

We are using the Apache HttpClient library to make calls to remote services in the scheduled jobs. Unfortunately there are no default timeouts set when performing requests. After setting

connectTimeout
connectionRequestTimeout
socketTimeout

to 30 seconds the problem was gone.

int timeout = 30 * 1000; // 30 seconds
RequestConfig requestConfig = RequestConfig.custom()
        .setConnectTimeout(timeout)
        .setConnectionRequestTimeout(timeout)
        .setSocketTimeout(timeout).build();
HttpClient client = HttpClients.custom()
        .setDefaultRequestConfig(requestConfig).build();
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    I was facing the EXACT same problem down to using Apache HttpClient.... You, my friend, are a gentleman and a scholar! Commented Aug 13, 2016 at 0:39
  • 1
    This was indeed my problem as well, specifically was using Jersey with the ApacheConnector configured with a PoolingHttpClientConnectionManager. It's critical to set the connectionRequestTimeout parameter as the pool could hang indefinitely if this is not set. To do this, you have to set it in a RequestConfig and set the entire request config in the connector client config like so: RequestConfig rc = RequestConfig.custom().setConnectTimeout(2000).setSocketTimeout(2000).setConnectionRequestTimeout(200).build(); clientConfig.property(ApacheClientProperties.REQUEST_CONFIG, rc);
    – David
    Commented Dec 8, 2016 at 20:58
  • @David is right, I've met same situation and I had socketTimeout and connectTimeout set, so connectionRequestTimeout is must to be set
    – mulya
    Commented Nov 17, 2022 at 10:44
  • I don't understand why this prevents the @scheduled job from running. Wouldn't this just prevent that individual run from succeeding due to a timeout?
    – ndtreviv
    Commented Mar 6, 2023 at 10:16
  • @ndtreviv The scheduler won't start a new run if the previous one hasn't been finished yet.
    – obecker
    Commented Jul 10, 2023 at 15:03
5

This is pretty easy to find out. You would be doing this with a stack trace. There are many posts on how to get a stack trace, on unix system you do 'kill -3 ' and the stack trace appears in the catalina.out log file.

Once you have a stack trace, find the scheduler thread and see what it is doing. Is it possible that the task it was executing got stuck?

you can also post the stack trace here for more help.

what is important to know is what scheduler you use. if you use the SimpleAsyncTaskExecutor, it will start a new thread for each task, and your scheduling will never fail. However, if you have tasks that don't finish, you will run out of memory eventually.

http://docs.spring.io/spring/docs/3.0.x/reference/scheduling.html

1
  • Thanks - taking a thread dump has already been proposed by nicolas.hausschild and I have found a blocked HTTP call from the REST service. I have updated the HttpClient library and I wonder if this might solve the problem already.
    – obecker
    Commented Mar 17, 2014 at 7:43
3

In my case stack trace was absolutely clean, thread started only a couple of time and that's all. The problem was in conflict with another schedule.

Updated

Schedule not work correctly, because I use fixedDelayString and the previous job not ended when was time to start new. After changed schedule to fixedRateString, threads started correctly.

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