Threadsafe lazy loading when the loading could fail - c#

I've been spending about an hour searching for a concensus on something I'm trying to accomplish, but have yet to find anything conclusive in a particular direction.
My situation is as follows:
I have a multi-threaded application (.NET web service)
I have classes that use objects that take non-negligible time to load, so I would like to maintain them as static class members
The code that constructs these objects intermittently has a low chance of failure
I was previously using an approach that constructs these objects in a static constructor. The problem with this was that, as mentioned above, the constructor would occasionally fail, and once a .NET static constructor fails, the whole class is hosed until the process is restarted. There are no second chances with that approach.
The most intuitive-seeming approach after this was to use double-checked locking. There are a lot of pages around that talk about the evils of double-checked locking and say to use a static constructor, which I was already doing, but that doesn't seem to be an option for me, as the static constructor has the potential to fail and bring down the whole class.
The implementation (simplified, of course) I'm thinking of using is the following. All class and member names are purely demonstrative and not what I'm actually using. Is this approach going to be problematic? Can anyone suggest a better approach?
public class LazyMembers
{
private static volatile XmlDocument s_doc;
private static volatile XmlNamespaceManager s_nsmgr;
private static readonly object s_lock = new object();
private static void EnsureStaticMembers()
{
if (s_doc == null || s_nsmgr == null)
{
lock (s_lock)
{
if (s_doc == null || s_nsmgr == null)
{
// The following method might fail
// with an exception, but if it succeeds,
// s_doc and s_nsmgr will be initialized
s_doc = LoadDoc(out s_nsmgr);
}
}
}
}
public XmlNamespaceManager NamespaceManager
{
get
{
EnsureStaticMembers();
return s_nsmgr;
}
}
public XmlDocument GetDocClone()
{
EnsureStaticMembers();
return (XmlDocument)s_doc.Clone();
}
}

If you use .NET 4.0 you can refer to Lazy<T> and LazyThreadSafetyMode (it depends on whether you want few instances of T to be created or not in multithreaded environment. In your case you need to refer to Lazy<T>(Func<T> func, LazyThreadSafetyMode) constructor - here(MSDN)
Otherwise (if you use 3.5 or lower) you can CAS techinque to create single instance without locking.
Something like this:
get {
if( _instance == null) {
var singleton = new Singleton();
if(Interlocked.CompareExchange(ref _instance, singleton, null) != null) {
if (singleton is IDisposable) singleton.Dispose();
}
}
return _instance;
}
However, here you can only achieve LazyThreadSafetyMode.Publications behaviour - only one instance will be visible to other threads but few can be created.
Also, there should not be any problems with double check for null in your code - it's safe in .NET world (at least on x86 machines and associated memory model). There were some problems in Java world before 2004, AFAIK.

Related

Implementing ConcurrentDictionary

I'm trying to create my own Cache implementation for an API. It is the first time I work with ConcurrentDictionary and I do not know if I am using it correctly. In a test, something has thrown error and so far I have not been able to reproduce it again. Maybe some concurrency professional / ConcurrentDictionary can look at the code and find what may be wrong. Thank you!
private static readonly ConcurrentDictionary<string, ThrottleInfo> CacheList = new ConcurrentDictionary<string, ThrottleInfo>();
public override void OnActionExecuting(HttpActionContext actionExecutingContext)
{
if (CacheList.TryGetValue(userIdentifier, out var throttleInfo))
{
if (DateTime.Now >= throttleInfo.ExpiresOn)
{
if (CacheList.TryRemove(userIdentifier, out _))
{
//TODO:
}
}
else
{
if (throttleInfo.RequestCount >= defaultMaxRequest)
{
actionExecutingContext.Response = ResponseMessageExtension.TooManyRequestHttpResponseMessage();
}
else
{
throttleInfo.Increment();
}
}
}
else
{
if (CacheList.TryAdd(userIdentifier, new ThrottleInfo(Seconds)))
{
//TODO:
}
}
}
public class ThrottleInfo
{
private int _requestCount;
public int RequestCount => _requestCount;
public ThrottleInfo(int addSeconds)
{
Interlocked.Increment(ref _requestCount);
ExpiresOn = ExpiresOn.AddSeconds(addSeconds);
}
public void Increment()
{
// this is about as thread safe as you can get.
// From MSDN: Increments a specified variable and stores the result, as an atomic operation.
Interlocked.Increment(ref _requestCount);
// you can return the result of Increment if you want the new value,
//but DO NOT set the counter to the result :[i.e. counter = Interlocked.Increment(ref counter);] This will break the atomicity.
}
public DateTime ExpiresOn { get; } = DateTime.Now;
}
If I understand what you are trying to do if the ExpiresOn has passed remove the entry else update it or add if not exists.
You certainly can take advantage of the AddOrUpdateMethod to simplify some of your code.
Take a look here for some good examples: https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/dotnet/standard/collections/thread-safe/how-to-add-and-remove-items
Hope this helps.
The ConcurrentDictionary is sufficient as a thread-safe container only in cases where (1) the whole state that needs protection is its internal state (the keys and values it contains), and only if (2) this state can be mutated atomically using the specialized API it offers (GetOrAdd, AddOrUpdate). In your case the second requirement is not met, because you need to remove keys conditionally depending on the state of their value, and this scenario is not supported by the ConcurrentDictionary class.
So your current cache implementation is not thread safe. The fact that throws exceptions sporadically is a coincidence. It would still be non-thread-safe if it was totally throw-proof, because it would not be totally error-proof, meaning that it could occasionally (or permanently) transition to a state incompatible with its specifications (returning expired values for example).
Regarding the ThrottleInfo class, it suffers from a visibility bug that could remain unobserved if you tested the class extensively in one machine, and then suddenly emerge when you deployed your app in another machine with a different CPU architecture. The non-volatile private int _requestCount field is exposed through the public property RequestCount, so there is no guarantee (based on the C# specification) that all threads will see its most recent value. You can read this article by Igor Ostrovsky about the peculiarities of the memory models, which may convince you (like me) that employing lock-free techniques (using the Interlocked class in this case) with multithreaded code is more trouble than it's worth. If you read it and like it, there is also a part 2 of this article.

Is this a good way to check if only one instance of a class exists without resorting to using the Singleton pattern?

I have a class in my program of which I want only one copy. I don't want to use the Singleton pattern though for a couple of reasons (* see below). I know that I'll only have one copy of the class because I'll be the only one calling its constructor.
In my class's constructor, I want to check that only one copy of the class will exist and throw an exception if more than one exists. Is the code below a good pattern to use for this case?
public class MySingletonAlternative : IDisposable
{
private static int _count = 0;
public MySingletonAlternative()
{
int newValue = System.Threading.Interlocked.Increment(ref _count);
if (newValue > 1)
{
throw new NotImplementedException();
}
}
public void Dispose()
{
int newValue = System.Threading.Interlocked.Decrement(ref _count);
if (newValue < 0)
{
throw new ObjectDisposedException("MySingletonAlternative");
}
}
}
* Why I don't want to use a Singleton:
I want to be able to control when the class is created. In the traditional C# Singleton pattern, construction happens non-deterministically.
I want to avoid global variables.
When I'm debugging my code and an exception is raised in the Singleton's private constructor, Visual Studio highlights the exception, but it highlights the wrong line of code, usually in a different file.
I don't want to create this object lazily (using Lazy<T>). One instance of this class will exist for the life of my application. I gain nothing by constructing it lazily.
Use a IoC Container like an UnityContainer. It will erase all of your points you've mentioned why you don't want to use a Singleton (in the means of global variables or static). You will be able to fully controll the creation of your lifetime-instance and inject it into all classes that will need to use this.
Can you use dependency injection and then have the di container manage the lifetime of the class you want to create? an example is with Unity and the ContainerControlledLifetimeManager
http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/dn178463(v=pandp.30).aspx#sec34
DON'T USE THIS CODE BELOW IN REAL APPLICATIONS! It's just for demo purposes.
I guess it's not a good way, but it looks like that your approach will work just fine. I am not aware of edge cases though.
Just created a little test app to create 1 million instances in a for loop and count
the exceptions it raises.
In this case it should be: 1 instance successfully created and 999.000 exceptions raised.
I ran the test app a couple of times and it always returned 999.000.
Depending on your machine this code could take some time to finish,
cause it throws 999.000 exceptions.
public static volatile int _global_Exception_count = 0;
static async Task Main(string[] args)
{
_global_Exception_count = 0;
var list = Enumerable.Range(1, 1000000).ToList();
var tlist = list.Select(async item =>
{
MySingletonAlternative current = null;
try
{
current = new MySingletonAlternative();
}
catch (Exception ex) { System.Threading.Interlocked.Increment(ref _global_Exception_count); }
return await Task.FromResult(0);
});
await Task.WhenAll(tlist);
Console.WriteLine(_global_Exception_count);
}// end main

How to freeze a popsicle in .NET (make a class immutable)

I'm designing a class that I wish to make readonly after a main thread is done configuring it, i.e. "freeze" it. Eric Lippert calls this popsicle immutability. After it is frozen, it can be accessed by multiple threads concurrently for reading.
My question is how to write this in a thread safe way that is realistically efficient, i.e. without trying to be unnecessarily clever.
Attempt 1:
public class Foobar
{
private Boolean _isFrozen;
public void Freeze() { _isFrozen = true; }
// Only intended to be called by main thread, so checks if class is frozen. If it is the operation is invalid.
public void WriteValue(Object val)
{
if (_isFrozen)
throw new InvalidOperationException();
// write ...
}
public Object ReadSomething()
{
return it;
}
}
Eric Lippert seems to suggest this would be OK in this post.
I know writes have release semantics, but as far as I understand this only pertains to ordering, and it doesn't necessarily mean that all threads will see the value immediately after the write. Can anyone confirm this? This would mean this solution is not thread safe (this may not be the only reason of course).
Attempt 2:
The above, but using Interlocked.Exchange to ensure the value is actually published:
public class Foobar
{
private Int32 _isFrozen;
public void Freeze() { Interlocked.Exchange(ref _isFrozen, 1); }
public void WriteValue(Object val)
{
if (_isFrozen == 1)
throw new InvalidOperationException();
// write ...
}
}
Advantage here would be that we ensure the value is published without suffering the overhead on every read. If none of the reads are moved before the write to _isFrozen as the Interlocked method uses a full memory barrier I would guess this is thread safe. However, who knows what the compiler will do (and according to section 3.10 of the C# spec that seems like quite a lot), so I don't know if this is threadsafe.
Attempt 3:
Also do the read using Interlocked.
public class Foobar
{
private Int32 _isFrozen;
public void Freeze() { Interlocked.Exchange(ref _isFrozen, 1); }
public void WriteValue(Object val)
{
if (Interlocked.CompareExchange(ref _isFrozen, 0, 0) == 1)
throw new InvalidOperationException();
// write ...
}
}
Definitely thread safe, but it seems a little wasteful to have to do the compare exchange for every read. I know this overhead is probably minimal, but I'm looking for a reasonably efficient method (although perhaps this is it).
Attempt 4:
Using volatile:
public class Foobar
{
private volatile Boolean _isFrozen;
public void Freeze() { _isFrozen = true; }
public void WriteValue(Object val)
{
if (_isFrozen)
throw new InvalidOperationException();
// write ...
}
}
But Joe Duffy declared "sayonara volatile", so I won't consider this a solution.
Attempt 5:
Lock everything, seems a bit overkill:
public class Foobar
{
private readonly Object _syncRoot = new Object();
private Boolean _isFrozen;
public void Freeze() { lock(_syncRoot) _isFrozen = true; }
public void WriteValue(Object val)
{
lock(_syncRoot) // as above we could include an attempt that reads *without* this lock
if (_isFrozen)
throw new InvalidOperationException();
// write ...
}
}
Also seems definitely thread safe, but has more overhead than using the Interlocked approach above, so I would favour attempt 3 over this one.
And then I can come up with at least some more (I'm sure there are many more):
Attempt 6: use Thread.VolatileWrite and Thread.VolatileRead, but these are supposedly a little on the heavy side.
Attempt 7: use Thread.MemoryBarrier, seems a little too internal.
Attempt 8: create an immutable copy - don't want to do this
Summarising:
which attempt would you use and why (or how would you do it if entirely different)? (i.e. what is the best way for publishing a value once that is then read concurrently, while being reasonably efficient without being overly "clever"?)
does .NET's memory model "release" semantics of writes imply that all other threads see updates (cache coherency etc.)? I generally don't want to think too much about this, but it's nice to have an understanding.
EDIT:
Perhaps my question wasn't clear, but I am looking in particular for reasons as to why the above attempts are good or bad. Note that I am talking here about a scenario of one single writer that writes then freezes before any concurrent reads. I believe attempt 1 is OK but I'd like to know exactly why (as I wonder if reads could be optimized away somehow, for example).
I care less about whether or not this is good design practice but more about the actual threading aspect of it.
Many thanks for the response the question received, but I have chosen to mark this as an answer myself because I feel that the answers given do not quite answer my question and I do not want to give the impression to anyone visiting the site that the marked answer is correct simply because it was automatically marked as such due to the bounty expiring.
Furthermore I do not think the answer with the highest number of votes was overwhelmingly voted for, not enough to mark it automatically as an answer.
I am still leaning to attempt #1 being correct, however, I would have liked some authoritative answers. I understand x86 has a strong model, but I don't want to (and shouldn't) code for a particular architecture, after all that's one of the nice things about .NET.
If you are in doubt about the answer, go for one of the locking approaches, perhaps with the optimizations shown here to avoid a lot of contention on the lock.
Maybe slightly off topic but just out of curiosity :) Why don't you use "real" immutability? e.g. making Freeze() return an immutable copy (without "write methods" or any other possibility to change the inner state) and using this copy instead of the original object. You could even go without changing the state and return a new copy (with the changed state) on each write operation instead (afaik the string class works this). "Real immutability" is inherently thread safe.
I vote for Attempt 5, use the lock(this) implementation.
This is the most reliable means of making this work. Reader/writer locks could be employed, but to very little gain. Just go with using a normal lock.
If necessary you could improve the 'frozen' performance by first checking _isFrozen and then locking:
void Freeze() { lock (this) _isFrozen = true; }
object ReadValue()
{
if (_isFrozen)
return Read();
else
lock (this) return Read();
}
void WriteValue(object value)
{
lock (this)
{
if (_isFrozen) throw new InvalidOperationException();
Write(value);
}
}
If you really create, fill and freeze the object before showing it to other threads, then you don't need anything special to deal with thread-safety (the strong memory model of .NET is already your guarantee), so the solution 1 is valid.
But, if you give the unfrozen object to another thread (or if you are simple creating your class without knowing how users will use it) then using the version the solution that returns a new fully immutable instance is probably better. In this case, the Mutable instance is like the StringBuilder and the immutable instance is like the string. If you need an extra guarantee, the mutable instance may check its creator thread and throw exceptions if it is used from any other thread (in all methods... to avoid possible partial reads).
Attempt 2 is thread safe on x86 and other processors that have a strong memory model, but how I would do it is to make thread safety the consumers problem because there is no way for you to efficiently do it within the consumed code. Consider:
if(!foo.frozen)
{
foo.apropery = "avalue";
}
the thread saftey of the frozen property and the guard code in apropery's setter doesn't really matter because even they are perfectly thread safe you still have a race condition. Instead I would write it like
lock(foo)
{
if(!foo.frozen)
{
foo.apropery = "avalue";
}
}
and have neither of the properties inherently thread safe.
#1 - reader not threadsafe - I believe problem would be in reader side, not writer (code not shown)
#2 - reader not threadsafe - same as #1
#3 - promising, read check can be optimized out for most cases (when CPU caches are in sync)
Attempt 3:
Also do the read using Interlocked.
public class Foobar {
private object _syncRoot = new object();
private int _isFrozen = 0; // perf compiler warning, but training code, so show defaults
// Why Exchange to 1 then throw away result. Best to just increment.
//public void Freeze() { Interlocked.Exchange(ref _isFrozen, 1); }
public void Freeze() { Interlocked.Increment(ref _isFrozen); }
public void WriteValue(Object val) {
// if this core can see _isFrozen then no special lock or sync needed
if (_isFrozen != 0)
throw new InvalidOperationException();
lock(_syncRoot) {
if (_isFrozen != 0)
throw new InvalidOperationException(); // the 'throw' is 100x-1000x more costly than the lock, just eat it
_val = val;
}
}
public object Read() {
// frozen is one-way, if one-way state has been published
// to my local CPU cache then just read _val.
// There are very strange corner cases when _isFrozen and _val fields are in
// different cache lines, but should be nearly impossible to hit unless
// dealing with very large structs (make it more likely to cross
// 4k cache line).
if (_isFrozen != 0)
return _val;
// else
lock(_syncRoot) { // _isFrozen is 0 here
if (_isFrozen != 0) // if _isFrozen is 1 here we just collided with writer using lock on other thread, or our CPU cache was out of sync and lock() forced the dirty cache line to be read from main memory
return _val;
throw new InvalidOperationException(); // throw is 100x-1000x more expensive than lock, eat the cost of lock
}
}
}
Joe Duffy's post about 'volatile is dead' is, I think, in the context of his next-gen CLR/OS architecture and for CLR on ARM. Those of us doing multi-core x64/x86 I think volatile is fine. If perf is the primary concern I suggest you measure the code above and compare it to volatile.
Unlike other folks posting answers I wouldn't jump straight to lock() if you have lots of readers (3 or more threads likely to read the same object at the same time). But in your sample you mix perf-sensitive question with exceptions when a collision happens, which doesn't make much sense. If you're using exceptions, then you can also use other higher-level constructs.
If you want complete safety but need to optimize for lots of concurrent readers change lock()/Monitor to ReaderWriterLockSlim.
.NET has new primitives to handle publishing values. Take a look at Rx. It can be very fast and lockless for some cases (I think they use optimizations similar to above).
If written multiple times but only one value is kept - in Rx that is "new ReplaySubject(bufferSize: 1)". If you try it you might be surprised how fast it. At the same time I applaud your attempt to learn this level of detail.
If you want to go lockless get over your distaste for Thread.MemoryBarrier(). It is extremely important. But it has the same gotchas as volatile as described by Joe Duffy - it was designed as a hint to the compiler & CPU to prevent reordering of memory reads (which take a long time in CPU terms, so they are aggressively reordered when there are no hints present). When this reordering is combined with CLR constructs like auto-inline of functions and you can see very surprising behavior at the memory & register level. MemoryBarrier() just disables those single-threaded memory access assumptions that CPU and CLR use most of the time.
Perhaps my question wasn't clear, but I am looking in particular for reasons as to why the above attempts are good or bad. Note that I am talking here about a scenario of one single writer that writes then freezes before any concurrent reads. I believe attempt 1 is OK but I'd like to know exactly why (as I wonder if reads could be optimized away somehow, for example). I care less about whether or not this is good design practice but more about the actual threading aspect of it.
Ok, now I better understand what you are doing and looking for in a response. Allow me to elaborate on my previous answer promoting the use of locks by first addressing each of your attempts.
Attempt 1:
The approach of using a simple class that has no synchronization primitives of any form is entirely viable in your example. Since the 'authoring' thread is the only thread having access to this class during it's mutating state this should be safe. If an only if another thread has the potential to access before the class is 'frozen' would you need to provide synchronization. Essentially, it's not possible for a thread to have a cache of something it has never seen.
Aside from a thread having a cached copy of the internal state of this list there is one other concurrency issue that you should be concerned with. You should consider write reordering by the authoring thread. You example solution doesn't have enough code for me to address this, but the process of handing this 'frozen' list to another thread is the heart of the issue. Are you using Interlocked.Exchange or writing to a volatile state?
I still advocate that is not the best approach simply because there is no guarantee that another thread has not seen the instance while it's mutating.
Attempt 2:
While attempt 2 should not be used. If you are using atomic writes to a member, one should also use atomic reads. I would never recommend one without the other as without both reads and writes being atomic you haven't gained anything. The correct application of atomic reads and writes is your 'Attempt 3'.
Attempt 3:
This will guarantee an exception is thrown if a thread has attempted to mutate an frozen list. However it makes no assertion that a read is only acceptable on a frozen instance. This, IMHO, is just as bad as accessing our _isFrozen variable with atomic and non-atomic accessors. If you are going to say that it's important to safeguard writes, then you should always safeguard reads. One without the other is just 'odd'.
Overlooking my own feeling towards writing code that gaurds writes but not reads this is an acceptable approach given your specific uses. I have one writer, I write, I freeze, then I make it available to readers. Under this scenario you code works correctly. You rely on the atomic operation on the set of _isFrozen to provide the required memory barrier prior to handing the class to another thread.
In a nutshell this approach works, but again if a thread has an instance that is not frozen it's going to break.
Attempt 4:
While at heart this is nearly the same as attempt 3 (given one writer) there is one big difference. In this example, if you check _isFrozen in the reader then every access will require a memory barrier. This is unnecessary overhead once the list is frozen.
Still this has the same issue as Attempt 3 in that no assertions are made about the state of _isFrozen during the read so the performance should be identical in your example usage.
Attempt 5:
As I said this is my preference given the modification to read as appears in my other answer.
Attempt 6:
Is essentially the same as #4.
Attempt 7:
You could solve your specific needs with a Thread.MemoryBarrier. Essentially using the code from Attempt 1, you create the instance, call Freeze(), add your Thread.MemoryBarrier, and then share the instance (or share it within a lock). This should work great, again only under your limited use case.
Attempt 8:
Without knowing more about this, I can't advise on the cost of the copy.
Summary
Again I prefer using a class that has some threading guarantee or none at all. Creating a class that is only 'partially' thread safe is, IMO, dangerous.
In the words of a famous jedi master:
Either do or do not there is no try.
The same goes for thread safety. The class should either be thread safe or not. Taking this approach you are left with either using my augmentation of Attempt 5, or using Attempt 7. Given the choice, I would never recommend #7.
So my recommendation stands firmly behind a completely thread-safe version. The performance cost between the two is so infinitesimally small it's almost non-existent. The reader threads will never hit the lock simply because of your usage scenario of having a single writer. Yet, if they do, proper behavior is still a certainty. Thus as your code changes over time and suddenly your instance is being shared prior to being frozen you don't wind up with race condition that crashes your program. Thread safe, or not, don't be half-in or you wind up with nasty surprise someday.
My preference is all classes shared by more than one thread are one of two types:
Completely immutable.
Completely Thread-safe.
Since a popsicle list is not immutable by design it does not fit #1. Therefore if you are going to share the object across threads it should fit #2.
Hopefully all this ranting further explains my reasoning :)
_syncRoot
Many people have noticed that I skipped the use of a _syncRoot on my locking implementation. While the reasons to use _syncRoot are valid they are not always necessary. In your example usage where you have a single writer the use of lock(this) should suffice nicely without adding another heap allocation for _syncRoot.
Is the thing constructed and written to, then permanently frozen and read multiple times?
Or do you freeze and unfreeze and refreeze it multiple times?
If it's the former, then perhaps the "is frozen" check should be in the reader method not the writer method (to prevent it reading before it's frozen).
Or, if it's the latter, then the use case you need to beware of is:
Main thread invokes the writer method, finds that it's not frozen, and therefore begins to write
Before the write has finished, someone tries to freeze the object and then reads from it, while the other (main) thread is still writing
In the latter case, Google shows a lot of results for multiple reader single writer which you might find interesting.
In general, each mutable object should have precisely one clearly-defined "owner"; shared objects should be immutable. Popsicles should not be accessible by multiple threads until after they are frozen.
Personally, I don't like forms of popsicle immunity with an exposed "freeze" method. I think a cleaner approach is to have AsMutable and AsImmutable methods (each of which would simply return the object unmodified when appropriate). Such an approach can allow for more robust promises about immutability. For example, if an "unshared mutable object" is being mutated while its AsImmutable member is being called (behavior which would be contrary to the object being "unshared"), the state of the data in the copy may be indeterminate, but whatever was returned would be immutable. By contrast, if one thread froze an object and then assumed it was immutable while another thread was writing to it, the "immutable" object could end up changing after it was frozen and its values were read.
Edit
Based on further description, I would suggest having code which writes to the object do so within a monitor lock, and having the freeze routine look something like:
public Thingie Freeze(void) // Returns the object in question
{
if (isFrozen) // Private field
return this;
else
return DoFreeze();
}
Thingie DoFreeze(void)
{
if (Monitor.TryEnter(whatever))
{
isFrozen = true;
return this;
}
else if (isFrozen)
return this;
else
throw new InvalidOperationException("Object in use by writer");
}
The Freeze method may be called any number of times by any number of threads; it should be short enough to be inlined (though I haven't profiled it), and should thus take almost no time to execute. If the first access of the object in any thread is via the Freeze method, that should guarantee proper visibility under any reasonable memory model (even if the thread didn't see the updates to the object performed by the thread which created and originally froze it, it would perform the TryEnter, which would guarantee a memory barrier, and after that failed it would notice that the object was frozen and return it.
If code which is going to write the object acquires the lock first, an attempt to write to a frozen object could deadlock. If one would rather have such code throw an exception, one use TryEnter and throw an exception if it can't get the lock.
The object used for locking should be something which is exclusively held by the object to be frozen. If the object to be frozen doesn't hold a purely-private reference to anything, one could either lock on this or create a private object purely for locking purposes. Note that it is safe to abandon 'entered' monitor locks without cleanup; the GC will simply forget about them, since if no references exist to a lock there's no way anybody will ever care (or could even ask) whether the lock was entered at the time it was abandoned.
I am not sure in terms of cost how the following approach will do, but it is a bit different. Only initially if there are multiple threads trying to write value simultaneously will they encounter locks. Once it is frozen all later calls will get the exception directly.
Attempt 9:
public class Foobar
{
private readonly Object _syncRoot = new Object();
private object _val;
private Boolean _isFrozen;
private Action<object> WriteValInternal;
public void Freeze() { _isFrozen = true; }
public Foobar()
{
WriteValInternal = BeforeFreeze;
}
private void BeforeFreeze(object val)
{
lock (_syncRoot)
{
if (_isFrozen == false)
{
//Write the values....
_val = val;
//...
//...
//...
//and then modify the write value function
WriteValInternal = AfterFreeze;
Freeze();
}
else
{
throw new InvalidOperationException();
}
}
}
private void AfterFreeze(object val)
{
throw new InvalidOperationException();
}
public void WriteValue(Object val)
{
WriteValInternal(val);
}
public Object ReadSomething()
{
return _val;
}
}
Have you checked out Lazy
http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/dd642331.aspx
which uses ThreadLocal
http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/dd642243.aspx
And actually looking further there is a Freezable class...
http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/vstudio/ms602734(v=vs.100).aspx
you may achieve this using POST Sharp
take one interface
public interface IPseudoImmutable
{
bool IsFrozen { get; }
bool Freeze();
}
then derive your attribute from InstanceLevelAspect like this
/// <summary>
/// implement by divyang
/// </summary>
[Serializable]
[IntroduceInterface(typeof(IPseudoImmutable),
AncestorOverrideAction = InterfaceOverrideAction.Ignore, OverrideAction = InterfaceOverrideAction.Fail)]
public class PseudoImmutableAttribute : InstanceLevelAspect, IPseudoImmutable
{
private volatile bool isFrozen;
#region "IPseudoImmutable"
[IntroduceMember]
public bool IsFrozen
{
get
{
return this.isFrozen;
}
}
[IntroduceMember(IsVirtual = true, OverrideAction = MemberOverrideAction.Fail)]
public bool Freeze()
{
if (!this.isFrozen)
{
this.isFrozen = true;
}
return this.IsFrozen;
}
#endregion
[OnLocationSetValueAdvice]
[MulticastPointcut(Targets = MulticastTargets.Property | MulticastTargets.Field)]
public void OnValueChange(LocationInterceptionArgs args)
{
if (!this.IsFrozen)
{
args.ProceedSetValue();
}
}
}
public class ImmutableException : Exception
{
/// <summary>
/// The location name.
/// </summary>
private readonly string locationName;
/// <summary>
/// Initializes a new instance of the <see cref="ImmutableException"/> class.
/// </summary>
/// <param name="message">
/// The message.
/// </param>
public ImmutableException(string message)
: base(message)
{
}
public ImmutableException(string message, string locationName)
: base(message)
{
this.locationName = locationName;
}
public string LocationName
{
get
{
return this.locationName;
}
}
}
then apply in your class like this
[PseudoImmutableAttribute]
public class TestClass
{
public string MyString { get; set; }
public int MyInitval { get; set; }
}
then run it in multi thread
/// <summary>
/// The program.
/// </summary>
public class Program
{
/// <summary>
/// The main.
/// </summary>
/// <param name="args">
/// The args.
/// </param>
public static void Main(string[] args)
{
Console.Title = "Divyang Demo ";
var w = new Worker();
w.Run();
Console.ReadLine();
}
}
internal class Worker
{
private object SyncObject = new object();
public Worker()
{
var r = new Random();
this.ObjectOfMyTestClass = new MyTestClass { MyInitval = r.Next(500) };
}
public MyTestClass ObjectOfMyTestClass { get; set; }
public void Run()
{
Task readWork;
readWork = Task.Factory.StartNew(
action: () =>
{
for (;;)
{
Task.Delay(1000);
try
{
this.DoReadWork();
}
catch (Exception exception)
{
// Console.SetCursorPosition(80,80);
// Console.SetBufferSize(100,100);
Console.WriteLine("Read Exception : {0}", exception.Message);
}
}
// ReSharper disable FunctionNeverReturns
});
Task writeWork;
writeWork = Task.Factory.StartNew(
action: () =>
{
for (int i = 0; i < int.MaxValue; i++)
{
Task.Delay(1000);
try
{
this.DoWriteWork();
}
catch (Exception exception)
{
Console.SetCursorPosition(80, 80);
Console.SetBufferSize(100, 100);
Console.WriteLine("write Exception : {0}", exception.Message);
}
if (i == 5000)
{
((IPseudoImmutable)this.ObjectOfMyTestClass).Freeze();
}
}
});
Task.WaitAll();
}
/// <summary>
/// The do read work.
/// </summary>
public void DoReadWork()
{
// ThreadId where reading is done
var threadId = System.Threading.Thread.CurrentThread.ManagedThreadId;
// printing on screen
lock (this.SyncObject)
{
Console.SetCursorPosition(0, 0);
Console.SetBufferSize(290, 290);
Console.WriteLine("\n");
Console.WriteLine("Read Start");
Console.WriteLine("Read => Thread Id: {0} ", threadId);
Console.WriteLine("Read => this.objectOfMyTestClass.MyInitval: {0} ", this.ObjectOfMyTestClass.MyInitval);
Console.WriteLine("Read => this.objectOfMyTestClass.MyString: {0} ", this.ObjectOfMyTestClass.MyString);
Console.WriteLine("Read End");
Console.WriteLine("\n");
}
}
/// <summary>
/// The do write work.
/// </summary>
public void DoWriteWork()
{
// ThreadId where reading is done
var threadId = System.Threading.Thread.CurrentThread.ManagedThreadId;
// random number generator
var r = new Random();
var count = r.Next(15);
// new value for Int property
var tempInt = r.Next(5000);
this.ObjectOfMyTestClass.MyInitval = tempInt;
// new value for string Property
var tempString = "Randome" + r.Next(500).ToString(CultureInfo.InvariantCulture);
this.ObjectOfMyTestClass.MyString = tempString;
// printing on screen
lock (this.SyncObject)
{
Console.SetBufferSize(290, 290);
Console.SetCursorPosition(125, 25);
Console.WriteLine("\n");
Console.WriteLine("Write Start");
Console.WriteLine("Write => Thread Id: {0} ", threadId);
Console.WriteLine("Write => this.objectOfMyTestClass.MyInitval: {0} and New Value :{1} ", this.ObjectOfMyTestClass.MyInitval, tempInt);
Console.WriteLine("Write => this.objectOfMyTestClass.MyString: {0} and New Value :{1} ", this.ObjectOfMyTestClass.MyString, tempString);
Console.WriteLine("Write End");
Console.WriteLine("\n");
}
}
}
but still it will allow you to change property like array ,list . but if you apply more login in that then it may work for all type of property and field
I'd do something like this, inspired by C++ movable types. Just remember not to access the object after Freeze/Thaw.
Of course, you can add a _data != null check/throw if you want to be clear about why the user gets an NRE if accessing after thaw/freeze.
public class Data
{
public string _foo;
public int _bar;
}
public class Mutable
{
private Data _data = new Data();
public Mutable() {}
public string Foo { get => _data._foo; set => _data._foo = value; }
public int Bar { get => _data._bar; set => _data._bar = value; }
public Frozen Freeze()
{
var f = new Frozen(_data);
_data = null;
return f;
}
}
public class Frozen
{
private Data _data;
public Frozen(Data data) => _data = data;
public string Foo => _data._foo;
public int Bar => _data._bar;
public Mutable Thaw()
{
var m = new Mutable(_data);
_data = null;
return m;
}
}

What is the Behavior of a Dynamic Attribute in a Static (Extension) Class in C# (MVC3)

I am new to developing in .NET and C#, but have been a long-time developer, working with C, C++, Java, PHP, etc.
I have an MVC3 extension class for my data models that refers to the database. It is set as "private static" in the class, but I think that it is not keeping up with database changes. In other words, when I change data in the controllers, those changes aren't "noticed" in the db because it is static. Currently, I am creating and disposing of the variable for each use, to compensate.
My questions are:
Am I correct that a static db variable could behave that way?
Is it necessary to dispose of the dynamic variable in the static class, or will garbage collection still take care of it automatically?
Here is a relevant snippet of the class:
namespace PBA.Models {
using System;
using System.Text.RegularExpressions;
using PBA.Models;
using PBA.Controllers;
public static class Extensions {
private static PbaDbEntities db = null;
public static PbaDbEntities GetDb() {
// TODO: find out about static memory/disposal, etc.
//
if (db != null) {
db.Dispose();
}
db = new PbaDbEntities();
return db;
}
public static string GetCheckpointState(this Activity activity, long memberProjectId) {
GetDb(); // TODO: Do I need to do this each time, or will a one-time setting work?
string state = CheckpointController.CHECKPOINT_STATUS_NOT_STARTED;
try {
var sub = db.ActivitySubmissions.
Where(s => s.activityId == activity.activityId).
Where(s => s.memberProjectId == memberProjectId).
OrderByDescending(s => s.submitted).
First();
if (sub != null) {
state = sub.checkpointStatusId;
}
}
catch (Exception e) {
// omitted for brevity
}
return state;
}
}
}
Your code will fail horribly in production.
DataContexts are not thread-safe; you must not share a context between requests.
Never put mutable objects in static fields in multi-threaded applications.
Ignoring exceptions that way is a terrible idea, if you don't want to handle exceptions just don't try/catch, or catch & rethrow. Think about it like this, after you've buried the exception, your program is in an invalid state, b/c something you have no control over error'd out. Now, b/c you've buried the exception, your program can continue to operate but it's in a bad state.
If your code makes it to production, 3.5 yrs from now some jr. programmer is going to get involved in some middle of the night firestorm because all of a sudden the website is broken, even though it used to work. It will be completely impossible to track down where the exception is happening so, this poor guy is going to spend 48 straight hours adding logging code all over the place to track down the problem. He will find that some DBA somewhere decided to rename the column MemberProjectId to MemberProjectIdentifier, which caused your linq to blow up.
Think of the children, handle exceptions, don't bury them.
btw - yes, i have been that guy that has to figure out these types of mistakes.
It seems like you need to read about mvc3 and entity framework before writing coding and asking in here for help on something that's coded full of bad practices.
Answering your questions:
1- no
2- makes no sense as the answer to 1
Do it right, here are some useful documentation: http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ie/gg416514(v=vs.98).aspx
EDIT: Adding some explicit fix
You could access your dbcontext from an static class, something like this:
var context = DbProvider.CurrentDb;
The idea is to access your db from here always: from your extension methods and from your controller actions.
Then, the implementation of the DbProvider.CurrentDb will be something like this:
public static classDbProvider {
public static void Initialize(){
HttpContext.Current.ApplicationInstance.BeginRequest += CreateDb;
HttpConetxt.Current.ApplicationInstance.EndRequest += DisposeDb;
}
private static void CreateDb(object sender, EventArgs e) {
HttpContext.Items.Add("CurrentDb", new PbaDbEntities(););
}
private static void DisposeDb(object sender, EventArgs e)
{
Current.Dispose();
HttpContext.Items.Remove("CurrentDb");
}
public static PbaDbEntities CurrentDb{
get {
return (PbaDbEntities)HttpContext.Current.Items["CurrentDb"];
}
}
}
As you can see, it will create a new Db per each request and it will be available ONLY in that request. In that way, your db will be disposed at the end of each request. This pattern is called Open-Session-in-View.
Finally, you need to initialize the DbProvider calling the method
Initialize() in your Global.asax file, in the event Application_start.
Hope it helps.
I don't have any idea of the context here-- if db is simply a connection-like object or not, but it appears you are throwing away and recreating whatever it is unnecessarily.
Best to create a property (for whatever your doing) so to be consistent.
private static Thing _thing;
private static Thing thing{
get{
if(_thing==null){
_thing=new Thing();
}
return _thing;
}
}

Can(should?) Lazy<T> be used as a caching technique?

I'd like to use .NET's Lazy<T> class to implement thread safe caching. Suppose we had the following setup:
class Foo
{
Lazy<string> cachedAttribute;
Foo()
{
invalidateCache();
}
string initCache()
{
string returnVal = "";
//CALCULATE RETURNVAL HERE
return returnVal;
}
public String CachedAttr
{
get
{
return cachedAttribute.Value;
}
}
void invalidateCache()
{
cachedAttribute = new Lazy<string>(initCache, true);
}
}
My questions are:
Would this work at all?
How would the locking have to work?
I feel like I'm missing a lock somewhere near the invalidateCache, but for the life of me I can't figure out what it is.
I'm sure there's a problem with this somewhere, I just haven't figured out where.
[EDIT]
Ok, well it looks like I was right, there were things I hadn't thought about. If a thread sees an outdated cache it'd be a very bad thing, so it looks like "Lazy" is not safe enough. The Property is accessed a lot though, so I was engaging in pre-mature optimization in hopes that I could learn something and have a pattern to use in the future for thread-safe caching. I'll keep working on it.
P.S.: I decided to make the object thread-un-safe and have access to the object be carefully controlled instead.
Well, it's not thread-safe in that one thread could still see the old value after another thread sees the new value after invalidation - because the first thread could have not seen the change to cachedAttribute. In theory, that situation could perpetuate forever, although it's pretty unlikely :)
Using Lazy<T> as a cache of unchanging values seems like a better idea to me - more in line with how it was intended - but if you can cope with the possibility of using an old "invalidated" value for an arbitrarily long period in another thread, I think this would be okay.
cachedAttribute is a shared resource that needs to be protected from concurrent modification.
Protect it with a lock:
private readonly object gate = new object();
public string CachedAttr
{
get
{
Lazy<string> lazy;
lock (gate) // 1. Lock
{
lazy = this.cachedAttribute; // 2. Get current Lazy<string>
} // 3. Unlock
return lazy.Value // 4. Get value of Lazy<string>
// outside lock
}
}
void InvalidateCache()
{
lock (gate) // 1. Lock
{ // 2. Assign new Lazy<string>
cachedAttribute = new Lazy<string>(initCache, true);
} // 3. Unlock
}
or use Interlocked.Exchange:
void InvalidateCache()
{
Interlocked.Exchange(ref cachedAttribute, new Lazy<string>(initCache, true));
}
volatile might work as well in this scenario, but it makes my head hurt.

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