I think I've managed to make a test that shows this problem repeatably, at least on my system. This question relates to HttpClient being used for a bad endpoint (nonexistant endpoint, the target is down).
The problem is that the number of completed tasks falls short of the total, usually by about a few. I don't mind requests not working, but this just results in the app just hanging there when the results are awaited.
I get the following result form the test code below:
Elapsed: 237.2009884 seconds. Tasks in batch array: 8000 Completed Tasks : 7993
If i set batchsize to 8 instead of 8000, it completes. For 8000 it jams on the WhenAll .
I wonder if other people get the same result, if I am doing something wrong, and if this appears to be a bug.
using System;
using System.Diagnostics;
using System.Linq;
using System.Net.Http;
using System.Threading;
using System.Threading.Tasks;
namespace CustomArrayTesting
{
/// <summary>
/// Problem: a large batch of async http requests is done in a loop using HttpClient, and a few of them never complete
/// </summary>
class ProgramTestHttpClient
{
static readonly int batchSize = 8000; //large batch size brings about the problem
static readonly Uri Target = new Uri("http://localhost:8080/BadAddress");
static TimeSpan httpClientTimeout = TimeSpan.FromSeconds(3); // short Timeout seems to bring about the problem.
/// <summary>
/// Sends off a bunch of async httpRequests using a loop, and then waits for the batch of requests to finish.
/// I installed asp.net web api client libraries Nuget package.
/// </summary>
static void Main(String[] args)
{
httpClient.Timeout = httpClientTimeout;
stopWatch = new Stopwatch();
stopWatch.Start();
// this timer updates the screen with the number of completed tasks in the batch (See timerAction method bellow Main)
TimerCallback _timerAction = timerAction;
TimerCallback _resetTimer = ResetTimer;
TimerCallback _timerCallback = _timerAction + _resetTimer;
timer = new Timer(_timerCallback, null, TimeSpan.FromSeconds(1), Timeout.InfiniteTimeSpan);
//
for (int i = 0; i < batchSize; i++)
{
Task<HttpResponseMessage> _response = httpClient.PostAsJsonAsync<Object>(Target, new Object());//WatchRequestBody()
Batch[i] = _response;
}
try
{
Task.WhenAll(Batch).Wait();
}
catch (Exception ex)
{
}
timer.Dispose();
timerAction(null);
stopWatch.Stop();
Console.WriteLine("Done");
Console.ReadLine();
}
static readonly TimeSpan timerRepeat = TimeSpan.FromSeconds(1);
static readonly HttpClient httpClient = new HttpClient();
static Stopwatch stopWatch;
static System.Threading.Timer timer;
static readonly Task[] Batch = new Task[batchSize];
static void timerAction(Object state)
{
Console.Clear();
Console.WriteLine("Elapsed: {0} seconds.", stopWatch.Elapsed.TotalSeconds);
var _tasks = from _task in Batch where _task != null select _task;
int _tasksCount = _tasks.Count();
var _completedTasks = from __task in _tasks where __task.IsCompleted select __task;
int _completedTasksCount = _completedTasks.Count();
Console.WriteLine("Tasks in batch array: {0} Completed Tasks : {1} ", _tasksCount, _completedTasksCount);
}
static void ResetTimer(Object state)
{
timer.Change(timerRepeat, Timeout.InfiniteTimeSpan);
}
}
}
Sometimes it just crashes before finishing with an Access Violation unhandled exception. The call stack just says:
> mscorlib.dll!System.Threading._IOCompletionCallback.PerformIOCompletionCallback(uint errorCode = 1225, uint numBytes = 0, System.Threading.NativeOverlapped* pOVERLAP = 0x08b38b98)
[Native to Managed Transition]
kernel32.dll!@BaseThreadInitThunk@12()
ntdll.dll!___RtlUserThreadStart@8()
ntdll.dll!__RtlUserThreadStart@8()
Most of the time it doesn't crash but just never finishes waiting on the whenall. In any case the following first chance exceptions are thrown for each request:
A first chance exception of type 'System.Net.Sockets.SocketException' occurred in System.dll
A first chance exception of type 'System.Net.WebException' occurred in System.dll
A first chance exception of type 'System.AggregateException' occurred in mscorlib.dll
A first chance exception of type 'System.ObjectDisposedException' occurred in System.dll
I made the debugger stop on the Object disposed exception, and got this call stack:
> System.dll!System.Net.Sockets.NetworkStream.UnsafeBeginWrite(byte[] buffer, int offset, int size, System.AsyncCallback callback, object state) + 0x136 bytes
System.dll!System.Net.PooledStream.UnsafeBeginWrite(byte[] buffer, int offset, int size, System.AsyncCallback callback, object state) + 0x19 bytes
System.dll!System.Net.ConnectStream.WriteHeaders(bool async = true) + 0x105 bytes
System.dll!System.Net.HttpWebRequest.EndSubmitRequest() + 0x8a bytes
System.dll!System.Net.HttpWebRequest.SetRequestSubmitDone(System.Net.ConnectStream submitStream) + 0x11d bytes
System.dll!System.Net.Connection.CompleteConnection(bool async, System.Net.HttpWebRequest request = {System.Net.HttpWebRequest}) + 0x16c bytes
System.dll!System.Net.Connection.CompleteConnectionWrapper(object request, object state) + 0x4e bytes
System.dll!System.Net.PooledStream.ConnectionCallback(object owningObject, System.Exception e, System.Net.Sockets.Socket socket, System.Net.IPAddress address) + 0xf0 bytes
System.dll!System.Net.ServicePoint.ConnectSocketCallback(System.IAsyncResult asyncResult) + 0xe6 bytes
System.dll!System.Net.LazyAsyncResult.Complete(System.IntPtr userToken) + 0x65 bytes
System.dll!System.Net.ContextAwareResult.Complete(System.IntPtr userToken) + 0x92 bytes
System.dll!System.Net.LazyAsyncResult.ProtectedInvokeCallback(object result, System.IntPtr userToken) + 0xa6 bytes
System.dll!System.Net.Sockets.BaseOverlappedAsyncResult.CompletionPortCallback(uint errorCode, uint numBytes, System.Threading.NativeOverlapped* nativeOverlapped) + 0x98 bytes
mscorlib.dll!System.Threading._IOCompletionCallback.PerformIOCompletionCallback(uint errorCode, uint numBytes, System.Threading.NativeOverlapped* pOVERLAP) + 0x6e bytes
[Native to Managed Transition]
The exception message was:
{"Cannot access a disposed object.\r\nObject name: 'System.Net.Sockets.NetworkStream'."} System.Exception {System.ObjectDisposedException}
Notice the relationship to that unhandled access violation exception that I rarely see.
So, it seems that HttpClient is not robust for when the target is down. I am doing this on windows 7 32 by the way.