Introduction

Go HTTP requests continue after context cancellation when the context is not properly propagated to the request. This guide provides step-by-step diagnosis and resolution with specific commands and code examples.

Symptoms

Typical symptoms and error messages when this issue occurs:

bash
context canceled
net/http: request canceled while waiting for connection

Observable indicators: - Application logs show connection or operation failures - Error messages appear in system or application logs - Related dependent services may exhibit cascading failures

Common Causes

  1. 1.The issue is typically caused by:
  2. 2.Incorrect configuration parameters
  3. 3.Missing or outdated dependencies
  4. 4.Resource exhaustion or timeout settings

Step-by-Step Fix

Step 1: Check Current State

bash
go version && go env

Step 2: Identify Root Cause

bash
go build -v ./...

Step 3: Apply Primary Fix

go
// Primary fix: update configuration
cfg := Config{
    Timeout:   30 * time.Second,
    MaxRetry:  3,
    LogLevel:  "info",
}

Apply this configuration and restart the application:

bash
go build && ./application

Step 4: Apply Alternative Fix (If Needed)

go
// Alternative fix: use context with timeout
ctx, cancel := context.WithTimeout(context.Background(), 30*time.Second)
defer cancel()
result, err := operation.WithContext(ctx)

After applying this configuration, verify the connection pool behavior under load testing.

Step 5: Verify the Fix

After applying the fix, verify with:

bash
curl -v https://api.example.com/health && echo "Success"

Expected output should show successful operation without errors.

Common Pitfalls

  • Not reading error messages carefully
  • Applying fixes without understanding root cause
  • Skipping verification after changes

Best Practices

  • Always use defer resp.Body.Close()
  • Configure reasonable timeouts (30s default)
  • Monitor connection pool metrics
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