On Mon, Aug 03, 2009 at 02:51:06PM -0700, Ken Krugler wrote: > BTW, I did read the section titled "Ensuring release of low level > resources" on the > http://hc.apache.org/httpcomponents-client/tutorial/html/fundamentals.html > page. This recommends using abort() to clean things up, but that would > seem to kill the keep-alive connection. > > So a better way to ask my question is whether there's any approach that > keeps the connection alive, without consuming all of the content. I'm > thinking the answer is no, but I wanted to confirm. >
I confirm this is not possible. Oleg > Thanks, > > -- Ken > > ==================== > ======================================================================== > I'm trying to keep connections alive so that I can more efficiently load > a set of pages from one web server domain. > > I also don't always read the complete response, to avoid having some 1GB > renegade file from a web server fill up memory. > > So if I truncate the response by not reading all of it, what's the safe > approach to make sure there aren't residual bytes in the server's buffer > that will get passed back in a subsequent request? Or is that even a > possibility? > > Currently I'm just closing the response.getEntity().getContent() > InputStream. > > -------------------------- > Ken Krugler > TransPac Software, Inc. > <http://www.transpac.com> > +1 530-210-6378 > > > --------------------------------------------------------------------- > To unsubscribe, e-mail: [email protected] > For additional commands, e-mail: [email protected] > --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: [email protected] For additional commands, e-mail: [email protected]
