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问题:
Performing millions of HTTP requests with different Java libraries gives me threads hanged on:
java.net.SocketInputStream.socketRead0()
Which is native
function.
I tried to set up Apche Http Client and RequestConfig
to have timeouts on (I hope) everythig that is possible but still, I have (probably infinite) hangs on socketRead0
. How to get rid of them?
Hung ratio is about ~1 per 10000 requests (to 10000 different hosts) and it can last probably forever (I've confirmed thread hung as still valid after 10 hours).
JDK 1.8 on Windows 7.
My HttpClient
factory:
SocketConfig socketConfig = SocketConfig.custom()
.setSoKeepAlive(false)
.setSoLinger(1)
.setSoReuseAddress(true)
.setSoTimeout(5000)
.setTcpNoDelay(true).build();
HttpClientBuilder builder = HttpClientBuilder.create();
builder.disableAutomaticRetries();
builder.disableContentCompression();
builder.disableCookieManagement();
builder.disableRedirectHandling();
builder.setConnectionReuseStrategy(new NoConnectionReuseStrategy());
builder.setDefaultSocketConfig(socketConfig);
return HttpClientBuilder.create().build();
My RequestConfig
factory:
HttpGet request = new HttpGet(url);
RequestConfig config = RequestConfig.custom()
.setCircularRedirectsAllowed(false)
.setConnectionRequestTimeout(8000)
.setConnectTimeout(4000)
.setMaxRedirects(1)
.setRedirectsEnabled(true)
.setSocketTimeout(5000)
.setStaleConnectionCheckEnabled(true).build();
request.setConfig(config);
return new HttpGet(url);
OpenJDK socketRead0
source
Note: Actually I have some "trick" - I can schedule .getConnectionManager().shutdown()
in other Thread
with cancellation of Future
if request finished properly, but it is depracated and also it kills whole HttpClient
, not only that single request.
回答1:
Though this question mentions Windows, I have the same problem on Linux. It appears there is a flaw in the way the JVM implements blocking socket timeouts:
- https://bugs.openjdk.java.net/browse/JDK-8049846
- https://bugs.openjdk.java.net/browse/JDK-8075484
To summarize, timeout for blocking sockets is implemented by calling poll
on Linux (and select
on Windows) to determine that data is available before calling recv
. However, at least on Linux, both methods can spuriously indicate that data is available when it is not, leading to recv
blocking indefinitely.
From poll(2) man page BUGS section:
See the discussion of spurious readiness notifications under the BUGS section of select(2).
From select(2) man page BUGS section:
Under Linux, select() may report a socket file descriptor as "ready
for reading", while nevertheless a subsequent read blocks. This could
for example happen when data has arrived but upon examination has
wrong checksum and is discarded. There may be other circumstances
in which a file descriptor is spuriously reported as ready. Thus it
may be safer to use O_NONBLOCK on sockets that should not block.
The Apache HTTP Client code is a bit hard to follow, but it appears that connection expiration is only set for HTTP keep-alive connections (which you've disabled) and is indefinite unless the server specifies otherwise. Therefore, as pointed out by oleg, the Connection eviction policy approach won't work in your case and can't be relied upon in general.
回答2:
As Clint said, you should consider a Non-blocking HTTP client, or (seeing that you are using the Apache Httpclient) implement a Multithreaded request execution to prevent possible hangs of the main application thread (this not solve the problem but is better than restart your app because is freezed). Anyway, you set the setStaleConnectionCheckEnabled
property but the stale connection check is not 100% reliable, from the Apache Httpclient tutorial:
One of the major shortcomings of the classic blocking I/O model is
that the network socket can react to I/O events only when blocked in
an I/O operation. When a connection is released back to the manager,
it can be kept alive however it is unable to monitor the status of the
socket and react to any I/O events. If the connection gets closed on
the server side, the client side connection is unable to detect the
change in the connection state (and react appropriately by closing the
socket on its end).
HttpClient tries to mitigate the problem by testing whether the
connection is 'stale', that is no longer valid because it was closed
on the server side, prior to using the connection for executing an
HTTP request. The stale connection check is not 100% reliable and adds
10 to 30 ms overhead to each request execution.
The Apache HttpComponents crew recommends the implementation of a Connection eviction policy
The only feasible solution that does not involve a one thread per
socket model for idle connections is a dedicated monitor thread used
to evict connections that are considered expired due to a long period
of inactivity. The monitor thread can periodically call
ClientConnectionManager#closeExpiredConnections() method to close all
expired connections and evict closed connections from the pool. It can
also optionally call ClientConnectionManager#closeIdleConnections()
method to close all connections that have been idle over a given
period of time.
Take a look at the sample code of the Connection eviction policy section and try to implement it in your application along with the Multithread request execution, I think the implementation of both mechanisms will prevent your undesired hangs.
回答3:
You should consider a Non-blocking HTTP client like Grizzly or Netty which do not have blocking operations to hang a thread.
回答4:
I have more than 50 machines that make about 200k requests/day/machine. They are running Amazon Linux AMI 2017.03. I previously had jdk1.8.0_102, now I have jdk1.8.0_131. I am using both apacheHttpClient and OKHttp as scraping libraries.
Each machine was running 50 threads, and sometimes, the threads get lost. After profiling with Youkit java profiler I got
ScraperThread42 State: RUNNABLE CPU usage on sample: 0ms
java.net.SocketInputStream.socketRead0(FileDescriptor, byte[], int, int, int) SocketInputStream.java (native)
java.net.SocketInputStream.socketRead(FileDescriptor, byte[], int, int, int) SocketInputStream.java:116
java.net.SocketInputStream.read(byte[], int, int, int) SocketInputStream.java:171
java.net.SocketInputStream.read(byte[], int, int) SocketInputStream.java:141
okio.Okio$2.read(Buffer, long) Okio.java:139
okio.AsyncTimeout$2.read(Buffer, long) AsyncTimeout.java:211
okio.RealBufferedSource.indexOf(byte, long) RealBufferedSource.java:306
okio.RealBufferedSource.indexOf(byte) RealBufferedSource.java:300
okio.RealBufferedSource.readUtf8LineStrict() RealBufferedSource.java:196
okhttp3.internal.http1.Http1Codec.readResponse() Http1Codec.java:191
okhttp3.internal.connection.RealConnection.createTunnel(int, int, Request, HttpUrl) RealConnection.java:303
okhttp3.internal.connection.RealConnection.buildTunneledConnection(int, int, int, ConnectionSpecSelector) RealConnection.java:156
okhttp3.internal.connection.RealConnection.connect(int, int, int, List, boolean) RealConnection.java:112
okhttp3.internal.connection.StreamAllocation.findConnection(int, int, int, boolean) StreamAllocation.java:193
okhttp3.internal.connection.StreamAllocation.findHealthyConnection(int, int, int, boolean, boolean) StreamAllocation.java:129
okhttp3.internal.connection.StreamAllocation.newStream(OkHttpClient, boolean) StreamAllocation.java:98
okhttp3.internal.connection.ConnectInterceptor.intercept(Interceptor$Chain) ConnectInterceptor.java:42
okhttp3.internal.http.RealInterceptorChain.proceed(Request, StreamAllocation, HttpCodec, Connection) RealInterceptorChain.java:92
okhttp3.internal.http.RealInterceptorChain.proceed(Request) RealInterceptorChain.java:67
okhttp3.internal.http.BridgeInterceptor.intercept(Interceptor$Chain) BridgeInterceptor.java:93
okhttp3.internal.http.RealInterceptorChain.proceed(Request, StreamAllocation, HttpCodec, Connection) RealInterceptorChain.java:92
okhttp3.internal.http.RetryAndFollowUpInterceptor.intercept(Interceptor$Chain) RetryAndFollowUpInterceptor.java:124
okhttp3.internal.http.RealInterceptorChain.proceed(Request, StreamAllocation, HttpCodec, Connection) RealInterceptorChain.java:92
okhttp3.internal.http.RealInterceptorChain.proceed(Request) RealInterceptorChain.java:67
okhttp3.RealCall.getResponseWithInterceptorChain() RealCall.java:198
okhttp3.RealCall.execute() RealCall.java:83
I found out that they have a fix for this
https://bugs.openjdk.java.net/browse/JDK-8172578
in JDK 8u152 (early access). I have installed it on one of our machines. Now I am waiting to see some good results.
回答5:
Given no one else responded so far, here is my take
Your timeout setting looks perfectly OK to me. The reason why certain requests appear to be constantly blocked in a java.net.SocketInputStream#socketRead0()
call is likely to be due to a combination of misbehaving servers and your local configuration. Socket timeout defines a maximum period of inactivity between two consecutive i/o read operations (or in other words two consecutive incoming packets). Your socket timeout setting is 5,000 milliseconds. As long as the opposite endpoint keeps on sending a packet every 4,999 milliseconds for a chunk encoded message the request will never time out and will end up sending most of its time blocked in java.net.SocketInputStream#socketRead0()
. You can find out whether or not this is the case by running HttpClient with wire logging turned on.
回答6:
For Apache HTTP Client (blocking) I found best solution is to getConnectionManager(). and shutdown it.
So in high-reliability solution I just schedule shutdown in other thread and in case request does not complete I'm shutting in down from other thread
回答7:
I bumped into the same issue using apache common http client.
There's a pretty simple workaround (which doesn't require shutting the connection manager down):
In order to reproduce it, one needs to execute the request from the question in a new thread paying attention to details:
- run request in separate thread, close request and release it's connection in a different thread, interrupt hanging thread
- don't run
EntityUtils.consumeQuietly(response.getEntity())
in finally block (because it hangs on 'dead' connection)
First, add the interface
interface RequestDisposer {
void dispose();
}
Execute an HTTP request in a new thread
final AtomicReference<RequestDisposer> requestDisposer = new AtomicReference<>(null);
final Thread thread = new Thread(() -> {
final HttpGet request = new HttpGet("http://my.url");
final RequestDisposer disposer = () -> {
request.abort();
request.releaseConnection();
};
requestDiposer.set(disposer);
try (final CloseableHttpResponse response = httpClient.execute(request))) {
...
} finally {
disposer.dispose();
}
};)
thread.start()
Call dispose()
in the main thread to close hanging connection
requestDisposer.get().dispose(); // better check if it's not null first
thread.interrupt();
thread.join();
That fixed the issue for me.
My stacktrace looked like this:
java.lang.Thread.State: RUNNABLE
at java.net.SocketInputStream.socketRead0(Native Method)
at java.net.SocketInputStream.socketRead(SocketInputStream.java:116)
at java.net.SocketInputStream.read(SocketInputStream.java:171)
at java.net.SocketInputStream.read(SocketInputStream.java:141)
at org.apache.http.impl.io.SessionInputBufferImpl.streamRead(SessionInputBufferImpl.java:139)
at org.apache.http.impl.io.SessionInputBufferImpl.fillBuffer(SessionInputBufferImpl.java:155)
at org.apache.http.impl.io.SessionInputBufferImpl.readLine(SessionInputBufferImpl.java:284)
at org.apache.http.impl.io.ChunkedInputStream.getChunkSize(ChunkedInputStream.java:253)
at org.apache.http.impl.io.ChunkedInputStream.nextChunk(ChunkedInputStream.java:227)
at org.apache.http.impl.io.ChunkedInputStream.read(ChunkedInputStream.java:186)
at org.apache.http.conn.EofSensorInputStream.read(EofSensorInputStream.java:137)
at sun.nio.cs.StreamDecoder.readBytes(StreamDecoder.java:284)
at sun.nio.cs.StreamDecoder.implRead(StreamDecoder.java:326)
at sun.nio.cs.StreamDecoder.read(StreamDecoder.java:178)
To whom it might be interesting, it easily reproducable, interrupt the thread without aborting request and releasing connection (ratio is about 1/100).
Windows 10, version 10.0.
jdk8.151-x64.