85
votes

When does java let go of a connections to a URL? I don't see a close() method on either URL or URLConnection so does it free up the connection as soon as the request finishes? I'm mainly asking to see if I need to do any clean up in an exception handler.

try {
  URL url = new URL("http://foo.bar");
  URLConnection conn = url.openConnection();
  // use the connection
}
catch (Exception e) {
  // any clean up here?
}
2
Never use catch( Exception ) , if an specific exception is thrown, catch each one in its own clauseOscarRyz
or at least catch the Exception last (in case none of the others catches the exception).jeremy

2 Answers

54
votes

If you cast to an HttpURLConnection, there is a disconnect() method. If the connection is idle, it will probably disconnect immediately. No guarantees.

50
votes

It depends on the specific protocol specified in the protocol. Some maintain persistent connections, other close their connections when your call close in the input or outputstream given by the connection. But other than remembering to closing the streams you opened from the URLConnection, there is nothing else you can do.

From the javadoc for java.net.URLConnection

Invoking the close() methods on the InputStream or OutputStream of an URLConnection after a request may free network resources associated with this instance, unless particular protocol specifications specify different behaviours for it.