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Asked: May 11, 20262026-05-11T01:18:16+00:00 2026-05-11T01:18:16+00:00

I recall hearing that the connection process in mysql was designed to be very

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I recall hearing that the connection process in mysql was designed to be very fast compared to other RDBMSes, and that therefore using a library that provides connection pooling (SQLAlchemy) won’t actually help you that much if you enable the connection pool.

Does anyone have any experience with this?

I’m leery of enabling it because of the possibility that if some code does something stateful to a db connection and (perhaps mistakenly) doesn’t clean up after itself, that state which would normally get cleaned up upon closing the connection will instead get propagated to subsequent code that gets a recycled connection.

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  1. 2026-05-11T01:18:16+00:00Added an answer on May 11, 2026 at 1:18 am

    There’s no need to worry about residual state on a connection when using SQLA’s connection pool, unless your application is changing connectionwide options like transaction isolation levels (which generally is not the case). SQLA’s connection pool issues a connection.rollback() on the connection when its checked back in, so that any transactional state or locks are cleared.

    It is possible that MySQL’s connection time is pretty fast, especially if you’re connecting over unix sockets on the same machine. If you do use a connection pool, you also want to ensure that connections are recycled after some period of time as MySQL’s client library will shut down connections that are idle for more than 8 hours automatically (in SQLAlchemy this is the pool_recycle option).

    You can quickly do some benching of connection pool vs. non with a SQLA application by changing the pool implementation from the default of QueuePool to NullPool, which is a pool implementation that doesn’t actually pool anything – it connects and disconnects for real when the proxied connection is acquired and later closed.

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