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Home/ Questions/Q 876005
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 15, 20262026-05-15T11:21:47+00:00 2026-05-15T11:21:47+00:00

I have a webrequest that createst a persistent (keepalive) connection to the server, e.g.:

  • 0

I have a webrequest that createst a persistent (keepalive) connection to the server, e.g.:

webRequest.ContentType = "application/x-www-form-urlencoded";
                    // Set the ContentLength property of the WebRequest.
                    webRequest.ContentLength = byteArray.Length;
                    webRequest.Timeout = Timeout.Infinite;
                    webRequest.KeepAlive = true;
                    webRequest.ReadWriteTimeout = Timeout.Infinite;
                    //[System.Threading.Timeout]::Infinite

                    webRequest.UserAgent = "www.socialblazeapp.com";
                    Stream dataStream = webRequest.GetRequestStream();
                    // Write the data to the request stream.
                    dataStream.Write(byteArray, 0, byteArray.Length);
                    // Close the Stream object.
                    dataStream.Close();
                    // Get the response.
                    webResponse = (HttpWebResponse)webRequest.GetResponse();
                    Encoding encode = System.Text.Encoding.GetEncoding("utf-8");
                    responseStream = new StreamReader(webResponse.GetResponseStream(), encode);
                    while(!responseStream.EndOfStream){ //do something}

I’m wondering why responseStream.EndOfStream becomes true after a while. I would have assumed that because this is a persistent connection, the stream would never close?

Any ideas why this is happening?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-15T11:21:48+00:00Added an answer on May 15, 2026 at 11:21 am

    I think you’re confusing keeping the TCP connection open with keeping the response stream open. The TCP connection is the underlying transmission medium, whereas the request and response are individual entities communicated via that connection.

    With a persistent connection you [in theory] could issue multiple request/response pairs across the same connection. Without a persistent connection you would essentially open the connection, issue the request, receive the response, then close the connection and then repeat that process for subsequent request/response pairs.

    The response itself however is finite in size, once you’re received the completed response the stream should close as there is nothing more to tell you. Once you issue another request, another response would follow; I’m not clear as to whether .Net will reuse the underlying persistent connection.

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