Thread: Connection time when using SSL
I am connecting to a Postgres instance using SSL and seeing fairly slow connect times. I would expect there would be some overhead but it's more than I anticipated. The connection is happening over a network. I am using a wildcard SSL certificate on the server side only.
Using one of these JDBC SSL connect strings takes on average: 1060 ms to connect to the database:
jdbc:postgresql://db01-dev.pointclickcare.com:5432/testdb?ssl=true&sslmode=require&sslfactory=org.postgresql.ssl.jdbc4.LibPQFactory
- or -
jdbc:postgresql://db01-dev.pointclickcare.com:5432/testdb?ssl=true&sslmode=require&sslfactory=org.postgresql.ssl.NonValidatingFactory
Using this JDBC non-SSL connect string takes on average: 190 ms to connect to the database:
jdbc:postgresql://db01-dev.pointclickcare.com:5432/testdb
Does this sound like a reasonable overhead that SSL would add to the connection time or does this seem high? (~870ms/~443% slower using SSL)
I am using this Postgres version:
PostgreSQL 9.4.1 on x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu, compiled by gcc (GCC) 4.4.7 20120313 (Red Hat 4.4.7-11), 64-bit
The Postgres JDBC driver I am using is:
postgresql-9.4-1201-jdbc41.jar
My pg_hba.conf is below. Not sure DNS names so DNS lookups shouldn't be a problem although performing an nslookup on my client IP does return very quickly. I've also tried connecting Postgres both using a DNS and IP directly.
# PostgreSQL Client Authentication Configuration File
# ===================================================
# TYPE DATABASE USER ADDRESS METHOD
local all postgres trust
local all all ident
host all all 127.0.0.1/32 md5
host all all ::1/128 md5
hostssl testdb all 0.0.0.0/0 md5
hostssl testdb all ::1/128 md5
# "local" is for Unix domain socket connections only
local all all peer
log_hostname in postgresql.conf is off.
I did a search on the forums and found some older posts. One suggested SSL compression is a culprit of slowdowns but I don't think that would apply to the connection time. Another says it could be the authentication that could be causing the slow down but changing md5 to either password or even trust made no difference to the connect time.
Hi On 06/01/15 22:51, Marco Di Cesare wrote: > I am connecting to a Postgres instance using SSL and seeing fairly slow > connect times. I would expect there would be some overhead but it's more > than I anticipated. The connection is happening over a network. I am > using a wildcard SSL certificate on the server side only. > Using one of these JDBC SSL connect strings takes on average: 1060 ms to > connect to the database: > jdbc:postgresql://db01-dev.pointclickcare.com:5432/testdb?ssl=true&sslmode=require&sslfactory=org.postgresql.ssl.jdbc4.LibPQFactory > - or - > jdbc:postgresql://db01-dev.pointclickcare.com:5432/testdb?ssl=true&sslmode=require&sslfactory=org.postgresql.ssl.NonValidatingFactory > Using this JDBC non-SSL connect string takes on average: 190 ms to > connect to the database: > jdbc:postgresql://db01-dev.pointclickcare.com:5432/testdb > Does this sound like a reasonable overhead that SSL would add to the > connection time or does this seem high? (~870ms/~443% slower using SSL) What is the network latency (ping) between the two hosts? SSL requires a handshake, exchanging a number messages between the two hosts, and if each roundtrip takes a significant amount of time ... The 190ms seems quite high. On my rather slow workstation, a local connection without SSL takes ~30ms , with SSL ~70ms. So I wouldn't be surprised by ~100ms roundtrips in your case, and that is going to slow down the SSL handshake significantly. There's very little you can do with the roundtrip time, usually, but you can keep the connections open in a pool. That'll amortize the costs. regards -- Tomas Vondra http://www.2ndQuadrant.com PostgreSQL Development, 24x7 Support, Remote DBA, Training & Services