As per the documentation Client is threadsafe and is suggested by the 
elasticsearch team to use the same client instance across your app. 
Considering your exception above you might need to look your configuration 
first (like cluster name and host/port) and you should use port 9300 for 
the Java API. Finally, check whether you are under a firewall or something 
and you block 9300 port.

Hope it helps
Thomas

On Monday, 10 March 2014 15:42:25 UTC+2, Robert Langenfeld wrote:
>
> Hello,
>
> I'm developing a tomcat webserver application that uses ElasticSearch 1.0 
> (Java API). There is a client facing desktop application that communicates 
> with the server so all the code for ElasticSearch is on that one instance 
> and it is used by all our clients. With that being said I am running into 
> this issue: After initializing a new TransportClient object and performing 
> some operation on it, there is a chance that i could sit idle for a very 
> long time. When does sit idle for a long time it gets this error:
>
>
> Mar 08, 2014 1:15:37 AM org.elasticsearch.client.transport
>
> INFO: [Elven] failed to get node info for 
> [#transport#-1][WIN7-113-00726][inet[/159.140.213.87:9300]], 
> disconnecting...
>
> org.elasticsearch.transport.RemoteTransportException: 
> [Server_Dev1][inet[/159.140.213.87:9300]][cluster/nodes/info]
>
> Caused by: java.lang.NullPointerException
>
> at org.elasticsearch.http.HttpInfo.writeTo(HttpInfo.java:82)
>
> at 
> org.elasticsearch.action.admin.cluster.node.info.NodeInfo.writeTo(NodeInfo.java:301)
>
> at 
> org.elasticsearch.action.admin.cluster.node.info.NodesInfoResponse.writeTo(NodesInfoResponse.java:63)
>
> at 
> org.elasticsearch.transport.netty.NettyTransportChannel.sendResponse(NettyTransportChannel.java:83)
>
> at 
> org.elasticsearch.action.support.nodes.TransportNodesOperationAction$TransportHandler$1.onResponse(TransportNodesOperationAction.java:244)
>
> at 
> org.elasticsearch.action.support.nodes.TransportNodesOperationAction$TransportHandler$1.onResponse(TransportNodesOperationAction.java:239)
>
> at 
> org.elasticsearch.action.support.nodes.TransportNodesOperationAction$AsyncAction.finishHim(TransportNodesOperationAction.java:225)
>
> at 
> org.elasticsearch.action.support.nodes.TransportNodesOperationAction$AsyncAction.onOperation(TransportNodesOperationAction.java:200)
>
> at 
> org.elasticsearch.action.support.nodes.TransportNodesOperationAction$AsyncAction.access$900(TransportNodesOperationAction.java:102)
>
> at 
> org.elasticsearch.action.support.nodes.TransportNodesOperationAction$AsyncAction$2.run(TransportNodesOperationAction.java:146)
>
> at 
> java.util.concurrent.ThreadPoolExecutor.runWorker(ThreadPoolExecutor.java:1145)
>
> at 
> java.util.concurrent.ThreadPoolExecutor$Worker.run(ThreadPoolExecutor.java:615)
>
> at java.lang.Thread.run(Thread.java:744)
>
> Is there any way to prevent this from happening? I know the ideal 
> situation would be that after every request the transport client is closed. 
> But since it lives on a webserver with lots of search requests coming in, 
> we would ideally like it to stay open because it takes 3-4 seconds for a 
> transport client to initialize and we are going for speed here.
>
> Also since we are having one central server to handle all search and index 
> requests, can the TransportClient handle multiple simultaneous requests 
> from different users at the same time? We just want to make sure that we 
> are doing this correctly.
>
>

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