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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?

1 Answer 1

12

This problem is probably not caused by Gunicorn or Flask but by the browser. I just tried to reproduce it. With two Firefox tabs it works; but if I run two curl processes in different consoles then they get served as expected (in parallel), and their requests are handled by different workers - this can be checked by enabling --log-level DEBUG while starting gunicorn.

I think this is because Firefox (and maybe other browsers) open a single connection to the server for each URL; and when you open one page on two tabs, their requests are sent through the same (kept-alive) connection and as a result come to the same worker.

As a result, even using async worker like eventlet will not help: async worker may handle multiple connections at a time, but when two requests land on the same connection then they will necessarily be handled one-by-one.

2
  • 1
    Interesting that originally such browser's behaviour regarding connections is intended to speed up loading by avoiding extra overhead of establishing new connections. But in this situation (with slow handling on server side) we see that it can result in slowing things down.
    – MarSoft
    Jan 28, 2016 at 2:26
  • I just tried with one tab in Chrome and one tab in Firefox and received the expected results. Thanks and nice call. Jan 28, 2016 at 2:34

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