/HikariCP

光 HikariCP・A solid high-performance JDBC connection pool at last.

Primary LanguageJavaApache License 2.0Apache-2.0

![](https://github.com/brettwooldridge/HikariCP/wiki/Hikari.png) HikariCP It's Faster.Hi·ka·ri [hi·ka·'lē] (*Origin: Japanese*): light; ray.


[![][Build Status img]][Build Status] [![][Issue Stats img]][Issue Stats] [![][Coverage Status img]][Coverage Status] [![][Dependency Status img]][Dependency Status] [![][license img]][license] [![][Maven Central img]][Maven Central]

Fast, simple, reliable. HikariCP is a "zero-overhead" production ready JDBC connection pool. At roughly 90Kb, the library is very light. Read about how we do it here.

   "Simplicity is prerequisite for reliability."
         - Edsger Dijkstra


Java 7 and Java 8 maven artifact:

    <dependency>
        <groupId>com.zaxxer</groupId>
        <artifactId>HikariCP</artifactId>
        <version>2.4.5</version>
    </dependency>

Java 6 maven artifact (maintenance mode):

    <dependency>
        <groupId>com.zaxxer</groupId>
        <artifactId>HikariCP-java6</artifactId>
        <version>2.3.13</version>
    </dependency>

Or download from here.


JMH Benchmarks

Microbenchmarks were created to isolate and measure the overhead of pools using the JMH microbenchmark framework developed by the Oracle JVM performance team. You can checkout the HikariCP benchmark project for details and review/run the benchmarks yourself.

  • One Connection Cycle is defined as single DataSource.getConnection()/Connection.close().
    • In Unconstrained benchmark, connections > threads.
    • In Constrained benchmark, threads > connections (2:1).
  • One Statement Cycle is defined as single Connection.prepareStatement(), Statement.execute(), Statement.close().
1 Versions: HikariCP 2.4.0, commons-dbcp2 2.1, Tomcat 8.0.23, Vibur 3.0, c3p0 0.9.5.1, Java 8u45
2 Java options: -server -XX:+AggressiveOpts -XX:+UseFastAccessorMethods -Xmx512m

User Testimonials




In the words of the guys over at Edulify, "HikariCP is supposed to be the fastest connection pool in Java land. But we did not start to use it because of speed, but because of its reliability. Here is a cool graph that shows connections opened to PostgreSQL. As you can see, the pool is way more stable. Also it is keeping its size at the minimum since we deploy it."


WIX Engineering Analysis

We'd like to thank the guys over at WIX for the unsolicited and deep write-up about HikariCP on their engineering blog. Take a look if you have time.

Failure: Pools behaving badly

Read our interesting "Database down" pool challenge.

You're [probably] doing it wrong.

AKA "What you probably didn't know about connection pool sizing". Read on to find out.


Configuration (knobs, baby!)

HikariCP comes with sane defaults that perform well in most deployments without additional tweaking. Every property is optional, except for the "essentials" marked below.

📎 HikariCP uses milliseconds for all time values.

Essentials

🔠dataSourceClassName
This is the name of the DataSource class provided by the JDBC driver. Consult the documentation for your specific JDBC driver to get this class name, or see the table below. Note XA data sources are not supported. XA requires a real transaction manager like bitronix. Note that you do not need this property if you are using jdbcUrl for "old-school" DriverManager-based JDBC driver configuration. Default: none

- or -

🔠jdbcUrl
This property directs HikariCP to use "DriverManager-based" configuration. We feel that DataSource-based configuration (above) is superior for a variety of reasons (see below), but for many deployments there is little significant difference. When using this property with "old" drivers, you may also need to set the driverClassName property, but try it first without. Note that if this property is used, you may still use DataSource properties to configure your driver and is in fact recommended over driver parameters specified in the URL itself. Default: none


🔠username
This property sets the default authentication username used when obtaining Connections from the underlying driver. Note that for DataSources this works in a very deterministic fashion by calling DataSource.getConnection(*username*, password) on the underlying DataSource. However, for Driver-based configurations, every driver is different. In the case of Driver-based, HikariCP will use this username property to set a user property in the Properties passed to the driver's DriverManager.getConnection(jdbcUrl, props) call. If this is not what you need, skip this method entirely and call addDataSourceProperty("username", ...), for example. Default: none

🔠password
This property sets the default authentication password used when obtaining Connections from the underlying driver. Note that for DataSources this works in a very deterministic fashion by calling DataSource.getConnection(username, *password*) on the underlying DataSource. However, for Driver-based configurations, every driver is different. In the case of Driver-based, HikariCP will use this password property to set a password property in the Properties passed to the driver's DriverManager.getConnection(jdbcUrl, props) call. If this is not what you need, skip this method entirely and call addDataSourceProperty("pass", ...), for example. Default: none

Frequently used

autoCommit
This property controls the default auto-commit behavior of connections returned from the pool. It is a boolean value. Default: true

connectionTimeout
This property controls the maximum number of milliseconds that a client (that's you) will wait for a connection from the pool. If this time is exceeded without a connection becoming available, a SQLException will be thrown. 1000ms is the minimum value. Default: 30000 (30 seconds)

idleTimeout
This property controls the maximum amount of time that a connection is allowed to sit idle in the pool. Whether a connection is retired as idle or not is subject to a maximum variation of +30 seconds, and average variation of +15 seconds. A connection will never be retired as idle before this timeout. A value of 0 means that idle connections are never removed from the pool. Default: 600000 (10 minutes)

maxLifetime
This property controls the maximum lifetime of a connection in the pool. When a connection reaches this timeout it will be retired from the pool, subject to a maximum variation of +30 seconds. An in-use connection will never be retired, only when it is closed will it then be removed. We strongly recommend setting this value, and it should be at least 30 seconds less than any database-level connection timeout. A value of 0 indicates no maximum lifetime (infinite lifetime), subject of course to the idleTimeout setting. Default: 1800000 (30 minutes)

🔠connectionTestQuery
If your driver supports JDBC4 we strongly recommend not setting this property. This is for "legacy" databases that do not support the JDBC4 Connection.isValid() API. This is the query that will be executed just before a connection is given to you from the pool to validate that the connection to the database is still alive. Again, try running the pool without this property, HikariCP will log an error if your driver is not JDBC4 compliant to let you know. Default: none

🔢minimumIdle
This property controls the minimum number of idle connections that HikariCP tries to maintain in the pool. If the idle connections dip below this value, HikariCP will make a best effort to add additional connections quickly and efficiently. However, for maximum performance and responsiveness to spike demands, we recommend not setting this value and instead allowing HikariCP to act as a fixed size connection pool. Default: same as maximumPoolSize

🔢maximumPoolSize
This property controls the maximum size that the pool is allowed to reach, including both idle and in-use connections. Basically this value will determine the maximum number of actual connections to the database backend. A reasonable value for this is best determined by your execution environment. When the pool reaches this size, and no idle connections are available, calls to getConnection() will block for up to connectionTimeout milliseconds before timing out. Default: 10

📈metricRegistry
This property is only available via programmatic configuration or IoC container. This property allows you to specify an instance of a Codahale/Dropwizard MetricRegistry to be used by the pool to record various metrics. See the Metrics wiki page for details. Default: none

📈healthCheckRegistry
This property is only available via programmatic configuration or IoC container. This property allows you to specify an instance of a Codahale/Dropwizard HealthCheckRegistry to be used by the pool to report current health information. See the Health Checks wiki page for details. Default: none

🔠poolName
This property represents a user-defined name for the connection pool and appears mainly in logging and JMX management consoles to identify pools and pool configurations. Default: auto-generated

Infrequently used

initializationFailFast
This property controls whether the pool will "fail fast" if the pool cannot be seeded with initial connections successfully. If you want your application to start even when the database is down/unavailable, set this property to false. Default: true

isolateInternalQueries
This property determines whether HikariCP isolates internal pool queries, such as the connection alive test, in their own transaction. Since these are typically read-only queries, it is rarely necessary to encapsulate them in their own transaction. This property only applies if autoCommit is disabled. Default: false

allowPoolSuspension
This property controls whether the pool can be suspended and resumed through JMX. This is useful for certain failover automation scenarios. When the pool is suspended, calls to getConnection() will not timeout and will be held until the pool is resumed. Default: false

readOnly
This property controls whether Connections obtained from the pool are in read-only mode by default. Note some databases do not support the concept of read-only mode, while others provide query optimizations when the Connection is set to read-only. Whether you need this property or not will depend largely on your application and database. Default: false

registerMbeans
This property controls whether or not JMX Management Beans ("MBeans") are registered or not. Default: false

🔠catalog
This property sets the default catalog for databases that support the concept of catalogs. If this property is not specified, the default catalog defined by the JDBC driver is used. Default: driver default

🔠connectionInitSql
This property sets a SQL statement that will be executed after every new connection creation before adding it to the pool. If this SQL is not valid or throws an exception, it will be treated as a connection failure and the standard retry logic will be followed. Default: none

🔠driverClassName
HikariCP will attempt to resolve a driver through the DriverManager based solely on the jdbcUrl, but for some older drivers the driverClassName must also be specified. Omit this property unless you get an obvious error message indicating that the driver was not found. Default: none

🔠transactionIsolation
This property controls the default transaction isolation level of connections returned from the pool. If this property is not specified, the default transaction isolation level defined by the JDBC driver is used. Only use this property if you have specific isolation requirements that are common for all queries. The value of this property is the constant name from the Connection class such as TRANSACTION_READ_COMMITTED, TRANSACTION_REPEATABLE_READ, etc. Default: driver default

validationTimeout
This property controls the maximum amount of time that a connection will be tested for aliveness. This value must be less than the connectionTimeout. The lowest accepted validation timeout is 1000ms (1 second). Default: 5000

leakDetectionThreshold
This property controls the amount of time that a connection can be out of the pool before a message is logged indicating a possible connection leak. A value of 0 means leak detection is disabled. Lowest acceptable value for enabling leak detection is 2000 (2 secs). Default: 0

dataSource
This property is only available via programmatic configuration or IoC container. This property allows you to directly set the instance of the DataSource to be wrapped by the pool, rather than having HikariCP construct it via reflection. This can be useful in some dependency injection frameworks. When this property is specified, the dataSourceClassName property and all DataSource-specific properties will be ignored. Default: none

threadFactory
This property is only available via programmatic configuration or IoC container. This property allows you to set the instance of the java.util.concurrent.ThreadFactory that will be used for creating all threads used by the pool. It is needed in some restricted execution environments where threads can only be created through a ThreadFactory provided by the application container. Default: none

Missing Knobs

HikariCP has plenty of "knobs" to turn as you can see above, but comparatively less than some other pools. This is a design philosophy. The HikariCP design aesthetic is Minimalism. In keeping with the simple is better or less is more design philosophy, some configuration axis are intentionally left out.

Statement Cache

Many connection pools, including Apache DBCP, Vibur, CP30 and others offer PreparedStatement caching. HikariCP does not. Why?

At the connection pool layer PreparedStatements can only be cached per connection. If your application has 250 commonly executed queries and a pool of 20 connections you are asking your database to hold on to 5000 query execution plans -- and similarly the pool must cache this many PreparedStatements and their related graph of objects.

Most major database JDBC drivers already have a Statement cache that can be configured, including PostgreSQL, Oracle, Derby, MySQL, DB2, and many others. JDBC drivers are in a unique position to exploit database specific features, and nearly all of the caching implementations are capable of sharing execution plans across connections. This means that instead of 5000 statements in memory and associated execution plans, your 250 commonly executed queries result in exactly 250 execution plans in the database. Clever implementations do not even retain PreparedStatement objects in memory at the driver-level but instead merely attach new instances to existing plan IDs.

Using a statement cache at the pooling layer is an anti-pattern, and will negatively impact your application performance compared to driver-provided caches.

Log Statement Text / Slow Query Logging

Like Statement caching, most major database vendors support statement logging through properties of their own driver. This includes Oracle, MySQL, Derby, MSSQL, and others. Some even support slow query logging. For those few databases that do not support it, log4jdbc or jdbcdslog-exp are good options.


Initialization

You can use the HikariConfig class like so:

HikariConfig config = new HikariConfig();
config.setJdbcUrl("jdbc:mysql://localhost:3306/simpsons");
config.setUsername("bart");
config.setPassword("51mp50n");
config.addDataSourceProperty("cachePrepStmts", "true");
config.addDataSourceProperty("prepStmtCacheSize", "250");
config.addDataSourceProperty("prepStmtCacheSqlLimit", "2048");

HikariDataSource ds = new HikariDataSource(config);

or directly instantiate a HikariDataSource like so:

HikariDataSource ds = new HikariDataSource();
ds.setJdbcUrl("jdbc:mysql://localhost:3306/simpsons");
ds.setUsername("bart");
ds.setPassword("51mp50n");
...

or property file based:

HikariConfig config = new HikariConfig("some/path/hikari.properties");
HikariDataSource ds = new HikariDataSource(config);

Example property file:

dataSourceClassName=org.postgresql.ds.PGSimpleDataSource
dataSource.user=test
dataSource.password=test
dataSource.databaseName=mydb
dataSource.portNumber=5432
dataSource.serverName=localhost

or java.util.Properties based:

Properties props = new Properties();
props.setProperty("dataSourceClassName", "org.postgresql.ds.PGSimpleDataSource");
props.setProperty("dataSource.user", "test");
props.setProperty("dataSource.password", "test");
props.setProperty("dataSource.databaseName", "mydb");
props.put("dataSource.logWriter", new PrintWriter(System.out));

HikariConfig config = new HikariConfig(props);
HikariDataSource ds = new HikariDataSource(config);

There is also a System property available, hikaricp.configurationFile, that can be used to specify the location of a properties file. If you intend to use this option, construct a HikariConfig or HikariDataSource instance using the default constructor and the properties file will be loaded.

Popular DataSource Class Names

We recommended using dataSourceClassName instead of jdbcUrl, but both are acceptable. We'll say that again, both are acceptable. Note: Spring Boot auto-configuration users, you need to use jdbcUrl-based configuration.

Here is a list of JDBC DataSource classes for popular databases:

Database Driver DataSource class
Apache Derby Derby org.apache.derby.jdbc.ClientDataSource
Firebird Jaybird org.firebirdsql.pool.FBSimpleDataSource
H2 H2 org.h2.jdbcx.JdbcDataSource
HSQLDB HSQLDB org.hsqldb.jdbc.JDBCDataSource
IBM DB2 IBM JCC com.ibm.db2.jcc.DB2SimpleDataSource
IBM Informix IBM Informix com.informix.jdbcx.IfxDataSource
MS SQL Server Microsoft com.microsoft.sqlserver.jdbc.SQLServerDataSource
MySQL Connector/J com.mysql.jdbc.jdbc2.optional.MysqlDataSource
MySQL/MariaDB MariaDB org.mariadb.jdbc.MySQLDataSource
Oracle Oracle oracle.jdbc.pool.OracleDataSource
OrientDB OrientDB com.orientechnologies.orient.jdbc.OrientDataSource
PostgreSQL pgjdbc-ng com.impossibl.postgres.jdbc.PGDataSource
PostgreSQL PostgreSQL org.postgresql.ds.PGSimpleDataSource
SAP MaxDB SAP com.sap.dbtech.jdbc.DriverSapDB
SQLite xerial org.sqlite.SQLiteDataSource
SyBase jConnect com.sybase.jdbc4.jdbc.SybDataSource

Play Framework Plugin

Note Play 2.4 now uses HikariCP by default. A new plugin has come up for the the Play framework; play-hikaricp. If you're using the excellent Play framework, your application deserves HikariCP. Thanks Edulify Team!

Clojure Wrapper

A new Clojure wrapper has been created by tomekw and can be found here.


Support 💬

Google discussion group HikariCP here, growing FAQ.

 

Wiki

Don't forget the Wiki for additional information such as:


Requirements

⇒ Java 7 and above
⇒ slf4j library

Sponsors

YourKit supports open source projects with its full-featured Java Profiler. Click the YourKit logo below to learn more.

Contributions

Please perform changes and submit pull requests from the dev branch instead of master. Please set your editor to use spaces instead of tabs, and adhere to the apparent style of the code you are editing. The dev branch is always more "current" than the master if you are looking to live life on the edge.