What is the difference between CloseableHttpClient and HttpClient in Apache HttpClient API?

  • The main entry point of the HttpClient API is the HttpClient interface.
  • The most essential function of HttpClient is to execute HTTP methods.
  • Execution of an HTTP method involves one or several HTTP request / HTTP response exchanges, usually handled internally by HttpClient.

  • CloseableHttpClient is an abstract class which is the base implementation of HttpClient that also implements java.io.Closeable.
  • Here is an example of request execution process in its simplest form:

    CloseableHttpClient httpclient = HttpClients.createDefault();
    HttpGet httpget = new HttpGet("http://localhost/");
    CloseableHttpResponse response = httpclient.execute(httpget);
    try {
        //do something
    } finally {
        response.close();
    }

  • HttpClient resource deallocation: When an instance CloseableHttpClient is no longer needed and is about to go out of scope the connection manager associated with it must be shut down by calling the CloseableHttpClient#close() method.

    CloseableHttpClient httpclient = HttpClients.createDefault();
    try {
        //do something
    } finally {
        httpclient.close();
    }

see the Reference to learn fundamentals.


@Scadge Since Java 7, Use of try-with-resources statement ensures that each resource is closed at the end of the statement. It can be used both for the client and for each response

try(CloseableHttpClient httpclient = HttpClients.createDefault()){

    // e.g. do this many times
    try (CloseableHttpResponse response = httpclient.execute(httpget)) {
    //do something
    }

    //do something else with httpclient here
}

Had the same question. The other answers don't seem to address why close() is really necessary? Also, Op seemed to be struggling to figure out the preferred way to work with HttpClient, et al.


According to Apache:

// The underlying HTTP connection is still held by the response object
// to allow the response content to be streamed directly from the network socket.
// In order to ensure correct deallocation of system resources
// the user MUST call CloseableHttpResponse#close() from a finally clause.

In addition, the relationships go as follows:

HttpClient (interface)

implemented by:

CloseableHttpClient - ThreadSafe.

DefaultHttpClient - ThreadSafe BUT deprecated, use HttpClientBuilder instead.

HttpClientBuilder - NOT ThreadSafe, BUT creates ThreadSafe CloseableHttpClient.

  • Use to create CUSTOM CloseableHttpClient.

HttpClients - NOT ThreadSafe, BUT creates ThreadSafe CloseableHttpClient.

  • Use to create DEFAULT or MINIMAL CloseableHttpClient.

The preferred way according to Apache:

CloseableHttpClient httpclient = HttpClients.createDefault();

The example they give does httpclient.close() in the finally clause, and also makes use of ResponseHandler as well.


As an alternative, the way mkyong does it is a bit interesting, as well:

HttpClient client = HttpClientBuilder.create().build();

He doesn't show a client.close() call but I would think it is necessary, since client is still an instance of CloseableHttpClient.


The other answers don't seem to address why close() is really necessary? * 2

Doubt on the answer "HttpClient resource deallocation".

It is mentioned in old 3.x httpcomponents doc, which is long back and has a lot difference from 4.x HC. Besides the explanation is so brief that doesn't say what this underlying resource is.

I did some research on 4.5.2 release source code, found the implementations of CloseableHttpClient:close() basically only closes its connection manager.

(FYI) That's why when you use a shared PoolingClientConnectionManager and call client close(), exception java.lang.IllegalStateException: Connection pool shut down will occur. To avoid, setConnectionManagerShared works.

I prefer not do CloseableHttpClient:close() after every single request

I used to create a new http client instance when doing request and finally close it. In this case, it'd better not to call close(). Since, if connection manager doesn't have "shared" flag, it'll be shutdown, which is too expensive for a single request.

In fact, I also found in library clj-http, a Clojure wrapper over Apache HC 4.5, doesn't call close() at all. See func request in file core.clj