Please be sure to read this answer below, which details ways to mitigate the problems outlined here.
The same drawbacks exist using PDO as with any other PHP database interface that does persistent connections: if your script terminates unexpectedly in the middle of database operations, the next request that gets the left over connection will pick up where the dead script left off. The connection is held open at the process manager level (Apache for mod_php, the current FastCGI process if you're using FastCGI, etc), not at the PHP level, and PHP doesn't tell the parent process to let the connection die when the script terminates abnormally.
If the dead script locked tables, those tables will remain locked until the connection dies or the next script that gets the connection unlocks the tables itself.
If the dead script was in the middle of a transaction, that can block a multitude of tables until the deadlock timer kicks in, and even then, the deadlock timer can kill the newer request instead of the older request that's causing the problem.
If the dead script was in the middle of a transaction, the next script that gets that connection also gets the transaction state. It's very possible (depending on your application design) that the next script might not actually ever try to commit the existing transaction, or will commit when it should not have, or roll back when it should not have.
This is only the tip of the iceberg. It can all be mitigated to an extent by always trying to clean up after a dirty connection on every single script request, but that can be a pain depending on the database. Unless you have identified creating database connections as the one thing that is a bottleneck in your script (this means you've done code profiling using xdebug and/or xhprof), you should not consider persistent connections as a solution to anything.
Further, most modern databases (including PostgreSQL) have their own preferred ways of performing connection pooling that don't have the immediate drawbacks that plain vanilla PHP-based persistent connections do.
To clarify a point, we use persistent connections at my workplace, but not by choice. We were encountering weird connection behavior, where the initial connection from our app server to our database server was taking exactly three seconds, when it should have taken a fraction of a fraction of a second. We think it's a kernel bug. We gave up trying to troubleshoot it because it happened randomly and could not be reproduced on demand, and our outsourced IT didn't have the concrete ability to track it down.
Regardless, when the folks in the warehouse are processing a few hundred incoming parts, and each part is taking three and a half seconds instead of a half second, we had to take action before they kidnapped us all and made us help them. So, we flipped a few bits on in our home-grown ERP/CRM/CMS monstrosity and experienced all of the horrors of persistent connections first-hand. It took us weeks to track down all the subtle little problems and bizarre behavior that happened seemingly at random. It turned out that those once-a-week fatal errors that our users diligently squeezed out of our app were leaving locked tables, abandoned transactions and other unfortunate wonky states.
This sob-story has a point: It broke things that we never expected to break, all in the name of performance. The tradeoff wasn't worth it, and we're eagerly awaiting the day we can switch back to normal connections without a riot from our users.
In response to Charles' problem above,
From : http://www.php.net/manual/en/mysqli.quickstart.connections.php -
A common complain about persistent connections is that their state is not reset before reuse. For example, open and unfinished transactions are not automatically rolled back. But also, authorization changes which happened in the time between putting the connection into the pool and reusing it are not reflected. This may be seen as an unwanted side-effect. On the contrary, the name persistent may be understood as a promise that the state is persisted.
The mysqli extension supports both interpretations of a persistent connection: state persisted, and state reset before reuse. The default is reset. Before a persistent connection is reused, the mysqli extension implicitly calls mysqli_change_user()
to reset the state. The persistent connection appears to the user as if it was just opened. No artifacts from previous usages are visible.
The mysqli_change_user()
function is an expensive operation. For best performance, users may want to recompile the extension with the compile flag MYSQLI_NO_CHANGE_USER_ON_PCONNECT
being set.
It is left to the user to choose between safe behavior and best performance. Both are valid optimization goals. For ease of use, the safe behavior has been made the default at the expense of maximum performance.
On my tests I had a connection time of over a second to my localhost, thus assuming I should use a persistent connection. Further tests showed it was a problem with 'localhost':
Test results in seconds (measured by php microtime):
Interestingly: The following code is just as fast as using 127.0.0.1:
$host = gethostbyname('localhost');
// echo "<p>$host</p>";
$db = new PDO("mysql:host=$host;dbname=" . DATABASE . ';charset=utf8', $username, $password,
array(PDO::ATTR_EMULATE_PREPARES => false,
PDO::ATTR_ERRMODE => PDO::ERRMODE_EXCEPTION));
Persistent connections are a good idea only when it takes a (relatively) long time to connect to your database. Nowadays that's almost never the case. The biggest drawback to persistent connections is that it limits the number of users you can have browsing your site: if MySQL is configured to only allow 10 concurrent connections at once then when an 11th person tries to browse your site it won't work for them.
PDO does not manage the persistence. The MySQL driver does. It reuses connections when a) they are available and the host/user/password/database match. If any change then it will not reuse a connection. The best case net effect is that these connections you have will be started and stopped so often because you have different users on the site and making them persistent doesn't do any good.
The key thing to understand about persistent connections is that you should NOT use them in most web applications. They sound enticing but they are dangerous and pretty much useless.
I'm sure there are other threads on this but a persistent connection is dangerous because it persists between requests. If, for example, you lock a table during a request and then fail to unlock then that table is going to stay locked indefinitely. Persistent connections are also pretty much useless for 99% of your apps because you have no way of knowing if the same connection will be used between different requests. Each web thread will have it's own set of persistent connections and you have no way of controlling which thread will handle which requests.
The procedural mysql library of PHP, has a feature whereby subsequent calls to mysql_connect will return the same link, rather than open a different connection (As one might expect). This has nothing to do with persistent connections and is specific to the mysql library. PDO does not exhibit such behaviour
Resource Link : link
In General you could use this as a rough "ruleset"::
YES, use persistent connections, if:
The database is running on another server that you are accessing over the network
An (one) application accesses the database very often
NO, don't use persistent connections, if:
Your application only needs to access the database 100 times an hour.
You have many, many webservers accessing one database server
Using persistent connections is considerable faster, especially if you are accessing the database over a network. It doesn't make so much difference if the database is running on the same machine, but it is still a little bit faster. However - as the name says - the connection is persistent, i.e. it stays open, even if it is not used.
The problem with that is, that in "default configuration", MySQL only allows 1000 parallel "open channels". After that, new connections are refused (You can tweak this setting). So if you have - say - 20 Webservers with each 100 Clients on them, and every one of them has just one page access per hour, simple math will show you that you'll need 2000 parallel connections to the database. That won't work.
Ergo: Only use it for applications with lots of requests.
Persistent connections should give a sizable performance boost. I disagree with the assement that you should "Avoid" persistence..
It sounds like the complaints above are driven by someone using MyIASM tables and hacking in their own versions of transactions by grabbing table locks.. Well of course you're going to deadlock! Use PDO's beginTransaction() and move your tables over to InnoDB..
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