I am using Jedis in a tomcat web app to connect to an Elascticache Redis node. The app is used by hundreds of users in day time. I am not sure of this is normal or not, but whenever I check the current connections count with cloudwatch metrics, I see the current connections increasing without falling down.
This is my Jedis pool configuration:
public static JedisPool getPool(){
if(pool == null){
JedisPoolConfig config = new JedisPoolConfig();
config.setMinIdle(5);
config.setMaxIdle(35);
config.setMaxTotal(1500);
config.setMaxWaitMillis(3000);
config.setTestOnBorrow(true);
config.setTestWhileIdle(true);
pool = new JedisPool(config, PropertiesManager.getInstance().getRedisServer());
}
return pool;
}
and this is how I always use the pool connections to execute redis commands:
Jedis jedis = JedisUtil.getPool().getResource();
try{
//Redis commands
}
catch(JedisException e){
e.printStackTrace();
throw e;
}finally{
if (jedis != null) JedisUtil.getPool().returnResource(jedis);
}
With this configuration, the count is currently over 200. Am I missing something that is supposed to discard or kill unsused connections ? I set maxIdle to 35 and I expected that the count falls down to 35 when the traffic is very low but this never happened.