On 4/17/20 12:02 AM, Paul Förster wrote:
Hi Adrian,

On 17. Apr, 2020, at 03:00, Adrian Klaver <adrian.kla...@aklaver.com> wrote:

Huh? Leaving open connections is not considered a good thing. In other words a 
connection should last for as long as it takes to get it's task done and then 
it should close.

I basically agree on this, but there are two big "but"s:

- recurring monitoring connections flood the logs unless they connect and never 
disconnect again.

- applications with hundreds or thousands of users may flood the logs, even 
though a pool may be used. If said pool doesn't keep its connections open most 
of the time you will notice that the database cluster is very busy logging 
connections.

But most pools can grow and shrink in response to demand, so at some point there are connect/disconnect cycles.


Do you really want that?

No. The issue at hand though was the idea that an application(Django in this case) would open a connection once and never reconnect. That is unrealistic.


Cheers,
Paul



--
Adrian Klaver
adrian.kla...@aklaver.com


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