I'm performing an http-benchmark using OkHttp 3.5.0. I'm sending thousands of requests to the same URL.
I expect that the OkHttp-client uses a ConnectionPool and reuses its connections over and over. But if we look into netstat
we'll see many connections in the TIME_WAIT state:
TCP 127.0.0.1:80 127.0.0.1:51752 TIME_WAIT
TCP 127.0.0.1:80 127.0.0.1:51753 TIME_WAIT
TCP 127.0.0.1:80 127.0.0.1:51754 TIME_WAIT
TCP 127.0.0.1:80 127.0.0.1:51755 TIME_WAIT
TCP 127.0.0.1:80 127.0.0.1:51756 TIME_WAIT
...
After a couple of thousands of requests I'm getting a SocketException: No buffer space available (maximum connections reached?)
The code preforming requests (Kotlin):
val client = OkHttpClient.Builder()
.connectionPool(ConnectionPool(5, 1, TimeUnit.MINUTES))
.build()
val request = Request.Builder().url("http://192.168.0.50").build()
while (true) {
val response = client.newCall(request).execute()
response.close()
}
If instead of response.close()
I use response.body().string()
, then SocketException
doesn't happen, but netstat
still shows plenty of TIME_WAIT connections, and the benchmark performance is getting lower and lower.
What am I doing wrong?
PS: I've tried to use Apache HttpClient and its PoolingHttpClientConnectionManager
, and seems like it works perfectly. But I'd like to figure out what's wrong with OkHttp.
threadCount
?response.body().string()
performsclose()
after consumption.threadCount
from the sample code. It was just a number of cores.