From 584a40513f820718b4356097fdf7452e154e6e99 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Florimond Manca Date: Tue, 8 Dec 2020 14:31:00 +0100 Subject: [PATCH] Tweak advanced timeouts docs (#1420) --- docs/advanced.md | 5 ++--- 1 file changed, 2 insertions(+), 3 deletions(-) diff --git a/docs/advanced.md b/docs/advanced.md index 3e009b1a..59c04ca1 100644 --- a/docs/advanced.md +++ b/docs/advanced.md @@ -633,7 +633,7 @@ There are four different types of timeouts that may occur. These are **connect** **read**, **write**, and **pool** timeouts. * The **connect** timeout specifies the maximum amount of time to wait until -a connection to the requested host is established. If HTTPX is unable to connect +a socket connection to the requested host is established. If HTTPX is unable to connect within this time frame, a `ConnectTimeout` exception is raised. * The **read** timeout specifies the maximum duration to wait for a chunk of data to be received (for example, a chunk of the response body). If HTTPX is @@ -645,7 +645,7 @@ to send data within this time frame, a `WriteTimeout` exception is raised. a connection from the connection pool. If HTTPX is unable to acquire a connection within this time frame, a `PoolTimeout` exception is raised. A related configuration here is the maximum number of allowable connections in the -connection pool, which is configured by the `pool_limits`. +connection pool, which is configured by the `limits` argument. You can configure the timeout behavior for any of these values... @@ -667,7 +667,6 @@ allow. (Defaults 10) - `max_connections`, maximum number of allowable connections, or` None` for no limits. (Default 100) - ```python limits = httpx.Limits(max_keepalive_connections=5, max_connections=10) client = httpx.Client(limits=limits)