I\'m using the github.com/go-sql-driver/mysql driver for go.
I open a database:
db, err := sql.Open(\"mysql\", str)
Then I have two fun
Try to make prepared statements db.Prepare(query string) (*Stmt, error)
and than stmt.Query
or stmt.Exec
and than stmt.Close
to reuse connections.
hi can you try close connection after used
db, err := sql.Open("mysql", str)
defer db.Close() // close after end scope
sql.Open doesn't really open a connection to your database.
A sql.DB maintains a pool of connections to your database. Each time you query your database your program will try to get a connection from this pool or create a new one otherwise. These connections are than put back into the pool once you close them.
This is what rows.Close()
does.
Your db.QueryRow("...")
does the same thing internally when you call Scan(...)
.
The basic problem is that you're creating too many queries, of which each one needs a connection, but you are not closing your connections fast enough. This way your program has to create a new connection for each query.
You can limit the maximum number of connections your program uses by calling SetMaxOpenConns on your sql.DB.
See http://go-database-sql.org/surprises.html for more information.
My program is connecting always to database. (Realtime Face Recognition for Attendance)
Therefore opening and closing database connection is worthless.
Therefore it's keep opens the database connection only initializing the program.
func GetAllFaces() interface{} {
OpenDatabaseConnection() ...
}
But access database later, increased the no of connection and crashed the program. But closing the rows
object kept no of active connection at minimum. (for me 1)
func SaveAttendance(faceId int, date time.Time) error {
sqlQuery := fmt.Sprintf("SELECT ... "))
rows, err := DB.Query(sqlQuery) ...
err = rows.Close()
return err
}
The *DB
object that you get back from sql.Open
doesn't corresponds to a single connection. It is better thought as a handle for the database: it manages a connection pool for you.
You can control the number of open connections with `(*DB).SetMaxOpenConns and its pair for idling connections.
So basically what happens here is that db.Query
and db.QueryRow
tries to acquire a connection for themselves and the DB handle doesn't put any restrictions on the number of simultaneous connections so your code panics when it opens more than what mysql can handle.