48

I've noticed that on one of my production web apps, when I manually recycle an app pool, the recycled worker process can take upwards of 60+ seconds to actually be completely destroyed, based on watching it in Task Manager. However, if I stop the app pool completely, the worker process goes away nearly instantaneously - within 1-2 seconds.

So, my question is two-fold:

a) Why does it take so long to destroy the process (and more meaningfully, release the resources used/locked by it) when the app pool is recycled instead of stopped; and

b) Assuming that I've stopped traffic from being directed to the server, is there any reason NOT to stop/start instead of recycle?


Edit:
To clarify, before I either recycle or stop the app pool, I stop traffic from being sent to the server in question (the server is in a load balanced cluster, and I remove the server from the load balancer). So, in theory, there should be no requests coming to the web site at the time I am doing anything to the app pool.


Edit Part Deux:
After reading Igal's link, it seems pretty obvious to me what is happening. When I recycle the app pool, the new process is started, but since there is no traffic at all, it isn't registering the new process as functioning, so it doesn't shut down the old one until the timeout (which is 90 seconds).

With that knowledge, it's clear to me that the "Recycle" functionality is specifically intended to be used midstream on a live server, and since I am manually draining traffic beforehand, I should use stop/start instead.

4 Answers 4

35

a) Because of Overlapped Recycling. There is a time period that the "old" process waits for the new one to start.

b) No. As far as I know.

2
  • @igal Hi ,Lets say the server had a session for John ( inProc ) . now lets say the admin made recycle. now the overlapped Recyccling occurs. and all requests are done. the new Process starts up. will john will have now the SAME SESSION ID ? ( restart wont save it for sure. the question is for recycle).
    – Royi Namir
    Oct 20, 2012 at 11:39
  • @RoyiNamir Hi. Recycle will not help. The Session ID and session data are lost after the recycle. Oct 29, 2012 at 13:48
15

A recycle if I recall correctly allows all existing requests to finish then it will recycle the application pool. A stop simply ends it at the exact instant that you stop it.

1
  • It's a very old answer with some upvotes, but I guess it's not an accurate answer. Please check my answer bellow and give you thoughs.
    – natenho
    Jul 28, 2018 at 17:56
10

According to this link,

Stopping – by stopping an application pool, you are instructing all IIS worker processes serving this application pool to shut down, and prevent any additional worker processes from being started until the application pool is started again. This initiates a graceful shutdown of the worker processes, with each worker process attempting to drain all of it’s requests and then exit.

If a worker process does not exit within the amount of time specified by the shutdownTimeLimit configuration property in the processModel element of each application pool’s definition (default: 90 sec), WAS will forcefully terminate it (this doesnt happen if a native debugger is attached).

Therefore, stopping an application pool is a disruptive action that causes unload of ASP.NET application domains, FastCGI child processes, and loss of any in-process application state.

Recycling – recycling an application pool causes all currently running IIS worker processes in that application pool to be gracefully shutdown, but unlike stopping the pool, new IIS worker processes can be started on demand to handle subsequent requests.

Recycling an application pool is a good way to cause the reset of application state and any configuration cached by the IIS worker processes that does not get automatically refreshed (mostly global registry keys), without disrupting the operation of the server. This makes recycling the application pool a great alternative to an IISRESET in most cases.

3

Stopping

  1. Gracefully stop all existing worker processes for this application pool.
  2. Do NOT allow new worker processes to start for this application pool.

Recycling

  1. Gracefully stop all existing worker processes for this application pool.
  2. Allow new worker processes to start for this application pool.
  3. Reset application state and cache

Note: Point 1 for both are exactly the same. Point 3 does not apply to Stopping because, well, the process is gone so state is obviously gone.

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