libcurl keeps a pool of old connections alive. When one transfer has completed it will keep N connections alive in a "connection pool" (sometimes also called connection cache) so that a subsequent transfer that happens to be able to reuse one of the existing connections can use it instead of creating a new one. Reusing a connection instead of creating a new one offers significant benefits in speed and required resources.
When libcurl is about to make a new connection for the purposes of doing a transfer, it will first check to see if there's an existing connection in the pool that it can reuse instead. The connection re-use check is done before any DNS or other name resolving mechanism is used, so it is purely host name based. If there's an existing live connection to the right host name, a lot of other properties (port number, protocol, etc) are also checked to see that it can be used.
When you are using the easy API, or, more
specifically, curl_easy_perform()
, libcurl will keep the pool associated
with the specific easy handle. Then reusing
the same easy handle will ensure it can
reuse its connection.
When you are using the multi API, the connection pool is instead kept associated with the multi handle. This allows you to cleanup and re-create easy handles freely without risking losing the connection pool, and it allows the connection used by one easy handle to get reused by a separate one in a later transfer. Just reuse the multi handle!
Since libcurl 7.57.0, applications can use the share interface to have otherwise independent transfers share the same connection pool.