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use crate::connection::Connection;
use crate::database::Database;
use crate::error::Error;
use crate::pool::inner::PoolInner;
use crate::pool::Pool;
use futures_core::future::BoxFuture;
use std::fmt::{self, Debug, Formatter};
use std::sync::Arc;
use std::time::{Duration, Instant};
/// Configuration options for [`Pool`][super::Pool].
///
/// ### Callback Functions: Why Do I Need `Box::pin()`?
/// Essentially, because it's impossible to write generic bounds that describe a closure
/// with a higher-ranked lifetime parameter, returning a future with that same lifetime.
///
/// Ideally, you could define it like this:
/// ```rust,ignore
/// async fn takes_foo_callback(f: impl for<'a> Fn(&'a mut Foo) -> impl Future<'a, Output = ()>)
/// ```
///
/// However, the compiler does not allow using `impl Trait` in the return type of an `impl Fn`.
///
/// And if you try to do it like this:
/// ```rust,ignore
/// async fn takes_foo_callback<F, Fut>(f: F)
/// where
/// F: for<'a> Fn(&'a mut Foo) -> Fut,
/// Fut: for<'a> Future<Output = ()> + 'a
/// ```
///
/// There's no way to tell the compiler that those two `'a`s should be the same lifetime.
///
/// It's possible to make this work with a custom trait, but it's fiddly and requires naming
/// the type of the closure parameter.
///
/// Having the closure return `BoxFuture` allows us to work around this, as all the type information
/// fits into a single generic parameter.
///
/// We still need to `Box` the future internally to give it a concrete type to avoid leaking a type
/// parameter everywhere, and `Box` is in the prelude so it doesn't need to be manually imported,
/// so having the closure return `Pin<Box<dyn Future>` directly is the path of least resistance from
/// the perspectives of both API designer and consumer.
pub struct PoolOptions<DB: Database> {
pub(crate) test_before_acquire: bool,
pub(crate) after_connect: Option<
Arc<
dyn Fn(&mut DB::Connection, PoolConnectionMetadata) -> BoxFuture<'_, Result<(), Error>>
+ 'static
+ Send
+ Sync,
>,
>,
pub(crate) before_acquire: Option<
Arc<
dyn Fn(
&mut DB::Connection,
PoolConnectionMetadata,
) -> BoxFuture<'_, Result<bool, Error>>
+ 'static
+ Send
+ Sync,
>,
>,
pub(crate) after_release: Option<
Arc<
dyn Fn(
&mut DB::Connection,
PoolConnectionMetadata,
) -> BoxFuture<'_, Result<bool, Error>>
+ 'static
+ Send
+ Sync,
>,
>,
pub(crate) max_connections: u32,
pub(crate) acquire_timeout: Duration,
pub(crate) min_connections: u32,
pub(crate) max_lifetime: Option<Duration>,
pub(crate) idle_timeout: Option<Duration>,
pub(crate) fair: bool,
pub(crate) parent_pool: Option<Pool<DB>>,
}
// Manually implement `Clone` to avoid a trait bound issue.
//
// See: https://github.com/launchbadge/sqlx/issues/2548
impl<DB: Database> Clone for PoolOptions<DB> {
fn clone(&self) -> Self {
PoolOptions {
test_before_acquire: self.test_before_acquire,
after_connect: self.after_connect.clone(),
before_acquire: self.before_acquire.clone(),
after_release: self.after_release.clone(),
max_connections: self.max_connections,
acquire_timeout: self.acquire_timeout,
min_connections: self.min_connections,
max_lifetime: self.max_lifetime,
idle_timeout: self.idle_timeout,
fair: self.fair,
parent_pool: self.parent_pool.as_ref().map(Pool::clone),
}
}
}
/// Metadata for the connection being processed by a [`PoolOptions`] callback.
#[derive(Debug)] // Don't want to commit to any other trait impls yet.
#[non_exhaustive] // So we can safely add fields in the future.
pub struct PoolConnectionMetadata {
/// The duration since the connection was first opened.
///
/// For [`after_connect`][PoolOptions::after_connect], this is [`Duration::ZERO`].
pub age: Duration,
/// The duration that the connection spent in the idle queue.
///
/// Only relevant for [`before_acquire`][PoolOptions::before_acquire].
/// For other callbacks, this is [`Duration::ZERO`].
pub idle_for: Duration,
}
impl<DB: Database> Default for PoolOptions<DB> {
fn default() -> Self {
Self::new()
}
}
impl<DB: Database> PoolOptions<DB> {
/// Returns a default "sane" configuration, suitable for testing or light-duty applications.
///
/// Production applications will likely want to at least modify
/// [`max_connections`][Self::max_connections].
///
/// See the source of this method for the current default values.
pub fn new() -> Self {
Self {
// User-specifiable routines
after_connect: None,
before_acquire: None,
after_release: None,
test_before_acquire: true,
// A production application will want to set a higher limit than this.
max_connections: 10,
min_connections: 0,
acquire_timeout: Duration::from_secs(30),
idle_timeout: Some(Duration::from_secs(10 * 60)),
max_lifetime: Some(Duration::from_secs(30 * 60)),
fair: true,
parent_pool: None,
}
}
/// Set the maximum number of connections that this pool should maintain.
///
/// Be mindful of the connection limits for your database as well as other applications
/// which may want to connect to the same database (or even multiple instances of the same
/// application in high-availability deployments).
pub fn max_connections(mut self, max: u32) -> Self {
self.max_connections = max;
self
}
/// Get the maximum number of connections that this pool should maintain
pub fn get_max_connections(&self) -> u32 {
self.max_connections
}
/// Set the minimum number of connections to maintain at all times.
///
/// When the pool is built, this many connections will be automatically spun up.
///
/// If any connection is reaped by [`max_lifetime`] or [`idle_timeout`], or explicitly closed,
/// and it brings the connection count below this amount, a new connection will be opened to
/// replace it.
///
/// This is only done on a best-effort basis, however. The routine that maintains this value
/// has a deadline so it doesn't wait forever if the database is being slow or returning errors.
///
/// This value is clamped internally to not exceed [`max_connections`].
///
/// We've chosen not to assert `min_connections <= max_connections` anywhere
/// because it shouldn't break anything internally if the condition doesn't hold,
/// and if the application allows either value to be dynamically set
/// then it should be checking this condition itself and returning
/// a nicer error than a panic anyway.
///
/// [`max_lifetime`]: Self::max_lifetime
/// [`idle_timeout`]: Self::idle_timeout
/// [`max_connections`]: Self::max_connections
pub fn min_connections(mut self, min: u32) -> Self {
self.min_connections = min;
self
}
/// Get the minimum number of connections to maintain at all times.
pub fn get_min_connections(&self) -> u32 {
self.min_connections
}
/// Set the maximum amount of time to spend waiting for a connection in [`Pool::acquire()`].
///
/// Caps the total amount of time `Pool::acquire()` can spend waiting across multiple phases:
///
/// * First, it may need to wait for a permit from the semaphore, which grants it the privilege
/// of opening a connection or popping one from the idle queue.
/// * If an existing idle connection is acquired, by default it will be checked for liveness
/// and integrity before being returned, which may require executing a command on the
/// connection. This can be disabled with [`test_before_acquire(false)`][Self::test_before_acquire].
/// * If [`before_acquire`][Self::before_acquire] is set, that will also be executed.
/// * If a new connection needs to be opened, that will obviously require I/O, handshaking,
/// and initialization commands.
/// * If [`after_connect`][Self::after_connect] is set, that will also be executed.
pub fn acquire_timeout(mut self, timeout: Duration) -> Self {
self.acquire_timeout = timeout;
self
}
/// Get the maximum amount of time to spend waiting for a connection in [`Pool::acquire()`].
pub fn get_acquire_timeout(&self) -> Duration {
self.acquire_timeout
}
/// Set the maximum lifetime of individual connections.
///
/// Any connection with a lifetime greater than this will be closed.
///
/// When set to `None`, all connections live until either reaped by [`idle_timeout`]
/// or explicitly disconnected.
///
/// Infinite connections are not recommended due to the unfortunate reality of memory/resource
/// leaks on the database-side. It is better to retire connections periodically
/// (even if only once daily) to allow the database the opportunity to clean up data structures
/// (parse trees, query metadata caches, thread-local storage, etc.) that are associated with a
/// session.
///
/// [`idle_timeout`]: Self::idle_timeout
pub fn max_lifetime(mut self, lifetime: impl Into<Option<Duration>>) -> Self {
self.max_lifetime = lifetime.into();
self
}
/// Get the maximum lifetime of individual connections.
pub fn get_max_lifetime(&self) -> Option<Duration> {
self.max_lifetime
}
/// Set a maximum idle duration for individual connections.
///
/// Any connection that remains in the idle queue longer than this will be closed.
///
/// For usage-based database server billing, this can be a cost saver.
pub fn idle_timeout(mut self, timeout: impl Into<Option<Duration>>) -> Self {
self.idle_timeout = timeout.into();
self
}
/// Get the maximum idle duration for individual connections.
pub fn get_idle_timeout(&self) -> Option<Duration> {
self.idle_timeout
}
/// If true, the health of a connection will be verified by a call to [`Connection::ping`]
/// before returning the connection.
///
/// Defaults to `true`.
pub fn test_before_acquire(mut self, test: bool) -> Self {
self.test_before_acquire = test;
self
}
/// Get's whether `test_before_acquire` is currently set.
pub fn get_test_before_acquire(&self) -> bool {
self.test_before_acquire
}
/// If set to `true`, calls to `acquire()` are fair and connections are issued
/// in first-come-first-serve order. If `false`, "drive-by" tasks may steal idle connections
/// ahead of tasks that have been waiting.
///
/// According to `sqlx-bench/benches/pg_pool` this may slightly increase time
/// to `acquire()` at low pool contention but at very high contention it helps
/// avoid tasks at the head of the waiter queue getting repeatedly preempted by
/// these "drive-by" tasks and tasks further back in the queue timing out because
/// the queue isn't moving.
///
/// Currently only exposed for benchmarking; `fair = true` seems to be the superior option
/// in most cases.
#[doc(hidden)]
pub fn __fair(mut self, fair: bool) -> Self {
self.fair = fair;
self
}
/// Perform an asynchronous action after connecting to the database.
///
/// If the operation returns with an error then the error is logged, the connection is closed
/// and a new one is opened in its place and the callback is invoked again.
///
/// This occurs in a backoff loop to avoid high CPU usage and spamming logs during a transient
/// error condition.
///
/// Note that this may be called for internally opened connections, such as when maintaining
/// [`min_connections`][Self::min_connections], that are then immediately returned to the pool
/// without invoking [`after_release`][Self::after_release].
///
/// # Example: Additional Parameters
/// This callback may be used to set additional configuration parameters
/// that are not exposed by the database's `ConnectOptions`.
///
/// This example is written for PostgreSQL but can likely be adapted to other databases.
///
/// ```no_run
/// # async fn f() -> Result<(), Box<dyn std::error::Error>> {
/// use sqlx::Executor;
/// use sqlx::postgres::PgPoolOptions;
///
/// let pool = PgPoolOptions::new()
/// .after_connect(|conn, _meta| Box::pin(async move {
/// // When directly invoking `Executor` methods,
/// // it is possible to execute multiple statements with one call.
/// conn.execute("SET application_name = 'your_app'; SET search_path = 'my_schema';")
/// .await?;
///
/// Ok(())
/// }))
/// .connect("postgres:// …").await?;
/// # Ok(())
/// # }
/// ```
///
/// For a discussion on why `Box::pin()` is required, see [the type-level docs][Self].
pub fn after_connect<F>(mut self, callback: F) -> Self
where
// We're passing the `PoolConnectionMetadata` here mostly for future-proofing.
// `age` and `idle_for` are obviously not useful for fresh connections.
for<'c> F: Fn(&'c mut DB::Connection, PoolConnectionMetadata) -> BoxFuture<'c, Result<(), Error>>
+ 'static
+ Send
+ Sync,
{
self.after_connect = Some(Arc::new(callback));
self
}
/// Perform an asynchronous action on a previously idle connection before giving it out.
///
/// Alongside the connection, the closure gets [`PoolConnectionMetadata`] which contains
/// potentially useful information such as the connection's age and the duration it was
/// idle.
///
/// If the operation returns `Ok(true)`, the connection is returned to the task that called
/// [`Pool::acquire`].
///
/// If the operation returns `Ok(false)` or an error, the error is logged (if applicable)
/// and then the connection is closed and [`Pool::acquire`] tries again with another idle
/// connection. If it runs out of idle connections, it opens a new connection instead.
///
/// This is *not* invoked for new connections. Use [`after_connect`][Self::after_connect]
/// for those.
///
/// # Example: Custom `test_before_acquire` Logic
/// If you only want to ping connections if they've been idle a certain amount of time,
/// you can implement your own logic here:
///
/// This example is written for Postgres but should be trivially adaptable to other databases.
/// ```no_run
/// # async fn f() -> Result<(), Box<dyn std::error::Error>> {
/// use sqlx::{Connection, Executor};
/// use sqlx::postgres::PgPoolOptions;
///
/// let pool = PgPoolOptions::new()
/// .test_before_acquire(false)
/// .before_acquire(|conn, meta| Box::pin(async move {
/// // One minute
/// if meta.idle_for.as_secs() > 60 {
/// conn.ping().await?;
/// }
///
/// Ok(true)
/// }))
/// .connect("postgres:// …").await?;
/// # Ok(())
/// # }
///```
///
/// For a discussion on why `Box::pin()` is required, see [the type-level docs][Self].
pub fn before_acquire<F>(mut self, callback: F) -> Self
where
for<'c> F: Fn(&'c mut DB::Connection, PoolConnectionMetadata) -> BoxFuture<'c, Result<bool, Error>>
+ 'static
+ Send
+ Sync,
{
self.before_acquire = Some(Arc::new(callback));
self
}
/// Perform an asynchronous action on a connection before it is returned to the pool.
///
/// Alongside the connection, the closure gets [`PoolConnectionMetadata`] which contains
/// potentially useful information such as the connection's age.
///
/// If the operation returns `Ok(true)`, the connection is returned to the pool's idle queue.
/// If the operation returns `Ok(false)` or an error, the error is logged (if applicable)
/// and the connection is closed, allowing a task waiting on [`Pool::acquire`] to
/// open a new one in its place.
///
/// # Example (Postgres): Close Memory-Hungry Connections
/// Instead of relying on [`max_lifetime`][Self::max_lifetime] to close connections,
/// we can monitor their memory usage directly and close any that have allocated too much.
///
/// Note that this is purely an example showcasing a possible use for this callback
/// and may be flawed as it has not been tested.
///
/// This example queries [`pg_backend_memory_contexts`](https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/view-pg-backend-memory-contexts.html)
/// which is only allowed for superusers.
///
/// ```no_run
/// # async fn f() -> Result<(), Box<dyn std::error::Error>> {
/// use sqlx::{Connection, Executor};
/// use sqlx::postgres::PgPoolOptions;
///
/// let pool = PgPoolOptions::new()
/// // Let connections live as long as they want.
/// .max_lifetime(None)
/// .after_release(|conn, meta| Box::pin(async move {
/// // Only check connections older than 6 hours.
/// if meta.age.as_secs() < 6 * 60 * 60 {
/// return Ok(true);
/// }
///
/// let total_memory_usage: i64 = sqlx::query_scalar(
/// "select sum(used_bytes) from pg_backend_memory_contexts"
/// )
/// .fetch_one(conn)
/// .await?;
///
/// // Close the connection if the backend memory usage exceeds 256 MiB.
/// Ok(total_memory_usage <= (2 << 28))
/// }))
/// .connect("postgres:// …").await?;
/// # Ok(())
/// # }
pub fn after_release<F>(mut self, callback: F) -> Self
where
for<'c> F: Fn(&'c mut DB::Connection, PoolConnectionMetadata) -> BoxFuture<'c, Result<bool, Error>>
+ 'static
+ Send
+ Sync,
{
self.after_release = Some(Arc::new(callback));
self
}
/// Set the parent `Pool` from which the new pool will inherit its semaphore.
///
/// This is currently an internal-only API.
///
/// ### Panics
/// If `self.max_connections` is greater than the setting the given pool was created with,
/// or `self.fair` differs from the setting the given pool was created with.
#[doc(hidden)]
pub fn parent(mut self, pool: Pool<DB>) -> Self {
self.parent_pool = Some(pool);
self
}
/// Create a new pool from this `PoolOptions` and immediately open at least one connection.
///
/// This ensures the configuration is correct.
///
/// The total number of connections opened is <code>max(1, [min_connections][Self::min_connections])</code>.
///
/// Refer to the relevant `ConnectOptions` impl for your database for the expected URL format:
///
/// * Postgres: [`PgConnectOptions`][crate::postgres::PgConnectOptions]
/// * MySQL: [`MySqlConnectOptions`][crate::mysql::MySqlConnectOptions]
/// * SQLite: [`SqliteConnectOptions`][crate::sqlite::SqliteConnectOptions]
/// * MSSQL: [`MssqlConnectOptions`][crate::mssql::MssqlConnectOptions]
pub async fn connect(self, url: &str) -> Result<Pool<DB>, Error> {
self.connect_with(url.parse()?).await
}
/// Create a new pool from this `PoolOptions` and immediately open at least one connection.
///
/// This ensures the configuration is correct.
///
/// The total number of connections opened is <code>max(1, [min_connections][Self::min_connections])</code>.
pub async fn connect_with(
self,
options: <DB::Connection as Connection>::Options,
) -> Result<Pool<DB>, Error> {
// Don't take longer than `acquire_timeout` starting from when this is called.
let deadline = Instant::now() + self.acquire_timeout;
let inner = PoolInner::new_arc(self, options);
if inner.options.min_connections > 0 {
// If the idle reaper is spawned then this will race with the call from that task
// and may not report any connection errors.
inner.try_min_connections(deadline).await?;
}
// If `min_connections` is nonzero then we'll likely just pull a connection
// from the idle queue here, but it should at least get tested first.
let conn = inner.acquire().await?;
inner.release(conn);
Ok(Pool(inner))
}
/// Create a new pool from this `PoolOptions`, but don't open any connections right now.
///
/// If [`min_connections`][Self::min_connections] is set, a background task will be spawned to
/// optimistically establish that many connections for the pool.
///
/// Refer to the relevant `ConnectOptions` impl for your database for the expected URL format:
///
/// * Postgres: [`PgConnectOptions`][crate::postgres::PgConnectOptions]
/// * MySQL: [`MySqlConnectOptions`][crate::mysql::MySqlConnectOptions]
/// * SQLite: [`SqliteConnectOptions`][crate::sqlite::SqliteConnectOptions]
/// * MSSQL: [`MssqlConnectOptions`][crate::mssql::MssqlConnectOptions]
pub fn connect_lazy(self, url: &str) -> Result<Pool<DB>, Error> {
Ok(self.connect_lazy_with(url.parse()?))
}
/// Create a new pool from this `PoolOptions`, but don't open any connections right now.
///
/// If [`min_connections`][Self::min_connections] is set, a background task will be spawned to
/// optimistically establish that many connections for the pool.
pub fn connect_lazy_with(self, options: <DB::Connection as Connection>::Options) -> Pool<DB> {
// `min_connections` is guaranteed by the idle reaper now.
Pool(PoolInner::new_arc(self, options))
}
}
impl<DB: Database> Debug for PoolOptions<DB> {
fn fmt(&self, f: &mut Formatter<'_>) -> fmt::Result {
f.debug_struct("PoolOptions")
.field("max_connections", &self.max_connections)
.field("min_connections", &self.min_connections)
.field("connect_timeout", &self.acquire_timeout)
.field("max_lifetime", &self.max_lifetime)
.field("idle_timeout", &self.idle_timeout)
.field("test_before_acquire", &self.test_before_acquire)
.finish()
}
}