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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 13, 20262026-05-13T21:30:28+00:00 2026-05-13T21:30:28+00:00

I’m using Linq to SQL and read in a blog post about closing database

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I’m using Linq to SQL and read in a blog post about closing database connections as soon as possible. As an example, they showed a variable being converted to a list (using .ToList()) instead of actually returning the Linq query. I have the below code:

 public static bool HasPassword(string userId)
 {

    ProjDataContext db = new ProjDataContext();

    bool hasPassword = (from p in db.tblSpecUser
                                    where p.UserID == userId
                                    select p.HasPassword).FirstOrDefault();


    return hasPassword;
 }

Is that query fine? Or will the database connection remain open for longer than necessary?

Thank you for any advice

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-13T21:30:29+00:00Added an answer on May 13, 2026 at 9:30 pm

    The connection will be managed automatically. However, there are (or at least can be as the comments suggest) additional resouces associated with the DataContext. These resources will not be released until the DataContext is destroyed by the garbage collector. So, it is usually better to make sure that dispose is called when you don’t need the DataContext anymore.

    using (ProjDataContext db = new ProjDataContext()) {
        bool hasPassword = (from p in db.tblSpecUser
                                        where p.UserID == userId
                                        select p.HasPassword).FirstOrDefault();
    
    
        return hasPassword;
    }
    

    Here it is ensured that db.Dispose() is called when the using block exits, thus closing the connection explicitly.

    Edit: Following the discussion I looked at the DataContext dispose myself (also using Reflector) and found the following code (FW 3.5) which gets called from DataContext.Dispose:

    protected virtual void Dispose(bool disposing)
    {
        if (disposing)
        {
            if (this.provider != null)
            {
                this.provider.Dispose();
                this.provider = null;
            }
            this.services = null;
            this.tables = null;
            this.loadOptions = null;
        }
    }
    

    So there are resources that gets freed:

    • The provider which may hold a DbConnection, a log (TextWriter) and a DbTransaction.
    • The the CommonDataServices.
    • The tables dictionary.
    • The LoadOptions.

    The provider may hold resources that needs to be disposed (DbConnection and DbTransaction). Also the TextWriter for the log may have to be disposed, depending upon what instance of the TextWriter the user has assigned to the DataContext‘s logging mechanism, e.g. a FileWriter that then gets closed automatically.

    The other properties hold, as far as I understand them -without looking too much into detail – only memory, but this is also made available for garbage collection by the dispose method, however, the it is not determined when the memory actually gets freed.

    So, finally I totally agree with casparOne’s statement:

    In general, sharing data-access resources like this is a bad idea.

    You should create your resources to access the DB, perform your operations, and then dispose of them when done.

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