tl;dr A method decorated with route
can't handle concurrent requests while Flask is served behind a gunicorn started with multiple workers and threads, while two different methods handle concurrent requests fine. Why is this the case, and how can the same route be served concurrently?
I have this simple flask app:
from flask import Flask, jsonify
import time
app = Flask(__name__)
@app.route('/foo')
def foo():
time.sleep(5)
return jsonify({'success': True}), 200
@app.route('/bar')
def bar():
time.sleep(5)
return jsonify({'success': False}), 200
If I run this via:
gunicorn test:app -w 1 --threads 1
If I quickly open up /bar
and /foo
in two different tabs in a browser, whichever tab I hit enter on first will load in 5 seconds, and the second tab will load in 10 seconds. This makes sense because gunicorn is running one worker with one thread.
If I run this via either:
gunicorn test:app -w 1 --threads 2
gunicorn test:app -w 2 --threads 1
In this case, opening up /foo
and /bar
in two different tabs both take 5 seconds. This makes sense, because gunicorn is running either 1 worker with two threads, or two workers with one thread each, and can serve up the two routes at the same time.
However, If I open up two /foo
at the same time, regardless of the gunicorn configuration, the second tab will always take 10 seconds.
How can I get the same method decorated by route
to serve concurrent requests?