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https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/HTTPCLIENT-1263?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:all-tabpanel
]
Oleg Kalnichevski resolved HTTPCLIENT-1263.
-------------------------------------------
Resolution: Fixed
Fix Version/s: 4.2.3
Francois-Xavier,
Many thanks for contributing the patch. I committed it to both trunk and 4.2.x
with some additional safeguards for those cases when response processing is
terminated with an exception.
Curiously enough, the problem was partially caused by ZIPInputStream never
reading past ZIP content structure thus never triggering an end of stream
condition (read operation returning -1), which is used by HttpClient to
automatically release the underlying HTTP connection back to the pool.
Oleg
> CachingHttpClient not consuming backend HttpResponse entity causing
> PoolingClientConnectionManager to become unresponsive
> -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> Key: HTTPCLIENT-1263
> URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/HTTPCLIENT-1263
> Project: HttpComponents HttpClient
> Issue Type: Bug
> Components: HttpClient
> Affects Versions: 4.2.1
> Reporter: Bryant Harris
> Labels: cache, connection-pooling, consumed
> Fix For: 4.2.3
>
> Attachments: HTTPCLIENT-1263.txt
>
>
> I've noticed that when issuing requests via a pooled and cached HttpClient
> that the client eventually becomes unresponsive (which appears to be because
> an HttpEntity is not getting consumed properly).
> Steps to reproduce.
> 1. Here is how I've configured all the relevant classes.
> HttpClient standardClient = null;
> HttpClient cachedClient = null;
> PoolingClientConnectionManager connectionManager = null;
> protected synchronized HttpClient getStandardClient() {
> if ( standardClient == null ) {
> connectionManager = new PoolingClientConnectionManager();
> connectionManager.setMaxTotal(2);
> connectionManager.closeIdleConnections(120, TimeUnit.SECONDS);
> standardClient = new DecompressingHttpClient( new DefaultHttpClient
> (connectionManager));
> }
> return standardClient;
> }
> protected synchronized HttpClient getCachedClient() {
> if ( cachedClient == null ) {
> CacheConfig cacheConfig = new CacheConfig();
> cacheConfig.setMaxObjectSize( 512*1024 );
> cacheConfig.setMaxCacheEntries( 10 );
> cachedClient = new CachingHttpClient(getStandardClient(),
> getCacheStorage(),
> cacheConfig);
> }
> return cachedClient;
> }
> As you can see I have two http clients. A caching http client that wraps the
> standard client.
> Now what I've found is that if I remove cachedClient and only use
> standardClient, I don't have any issues with the pool hanging and orphaned
> connections.
> 2. Here is my code for how I issue and consume requests
> HttpClient httpClient = cacheOkay ? getCachedClient() :
> getStandardClient();
> HttpResponse response = httpClient.execute(request, localContext);
> HttpEntity resEntity = response.getEntity();
> int responseStatus = response.getStatusLine().getStatusCode();
> byte[] responseBody = EntityUtils.toByteArray(resEntity);
> EntityUtils.consume(resEntity);
> If you set up a test like this and use the cached client, it will hang fairly
> quickly.
> I've been able to work around this by creating the CachingHttpClient as
> follows:
> protected synchronized HttpClient getCachedClient() {
> if ( cachedClient == null ) {
> WhosHereApplication application =
> WhosHereApplication.getInstance();
> cachedClient = new CachingHttpClient(getStandardClient(),
>
> new HeapResourceFactory() {
>
> @Override
>
> public Resource generate(
>
> String requestId,
>
> InputStream instream,
>
> InputLimit limit)
>
> throws IOException {
>
> try {
>
> return super.generate(requestId,
> instream, limit);
>
> }
>
> finally {
>
> instream.close();
>
> }
>
> }
>
>
> },
>
> application.getCacheStorage(),
>
> application.getCacheConfig());
> Log.i(tag, "Creating CachingHttpClient");
> }
>
> return cachedClient;
> }
> Notice the inline subclass of HeapResourceFactory where I add the stream
> close call. Once I add this the caching client no longer freezes up.
> I'm not familiar enough with the source code to pinpoint the issue, but
> appears the back end entity is not getting consumed properly, forcing this
> work around.
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