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https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/XMLRPC-167?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:comment-tabpanel&focusedCommentId=12707795#action_12707795
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Alan Burlison commented on XMLRPC-167:
--------------------------------------

I *knew* I'd written my transport factor to return a singleton transport for a 
reason, this is from XmlRpcTransportFactory:

----------
    /** Returns an instance of {...@link XmlRpcTransport}. This may
         * be a singleton, but the caller should not depend on that:
         * A new instance may as well be created for any request.
         * @return The configured transport.
         */
        public XmlRpcTransport getTransport();
----------

Jochen. that contradicts your statement that "the transport was never meant to 
be thread safe and will never be thread safe".  There is no way a transport 
factory can return an unsynchronized singleton and still be thread-safe.

I can either add the synchronization or fix the comment, but one or the other 
needs to be done.  Which would you prefer?

> XmlRpcClient is supposed to be thread-safe but it isn't
> -------------------------------------------------------
>
>                 Key: XMLRPC-167
>                 URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/XMLRPC-167
>             Project: XML-RPC
>          Issue Type: Bug
>          Components: Source
>    Affects Versions: 3.1.2
>         Environment: Solaris
>            Reporter: Alan Burlison
>         Attachments: XMLRPC-167.patch
>
>
> http://ws.apache.org/xmlrpc/apidocs/org/apache/xmlrpc/client/XmlRpcClient.html
>  says:
> ----------
> A configured XmlRpcClient object is thread safe: In other words, the 
> suggested use is, that you configure the client using 
> setTransportFactory(XmlRpcTransportFactory) and similar methods, store it in 
> a field and never modify it again. Without modifications, the client may be 
> used for an arbitrary number of concurrent requests.
> ----------
> I have a simple test case that creates two threads that share a single 
> XmlRpcClient instance, and if I run the test I see the following errors:
> ----------
> Fatal Error] :1:1: Content is not allowed in prolog.
> operation failed, Failed to parse server's response: Content is not allowed 
> in prolog.
> [Fatal Error] :1:10: Element type "xlvrsion" must be followed by either 
> attribute specifications, ">" or "/>".
> operation failed, Failed to parse server's response: Element type "xlvrsion" 
> must be followed by either attribute specifications, ">" or "/>".
> ----------
> ----------
> [Fatal Error] :1:1: Content is not allowed in prolog.
> [Fatal Error] :1:5: Element type "xlv" must be followed by either attribute 
> specifications, ">" or "/>".
> operation failed, Failed to parse server's response: Element type "xlv" must 
> be followed by either attribute specifications, ">" or "/>".
> operation failed, Failed to parse server's response: Content is not allowed 
> in prolog.
> ----------
> If I wrap the call to XmlRpcClient.execute with a synchronized block that 
> locks on the XmlRpcClient object, the code works fine.
> It looks like the execute code is not locking around the read/write to/from 
> the server, so the threads are competing to read the response from the 
> server, and are tripping over each other.

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