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Home/ Questions/Q 702683
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 14, 20262026-05-14T03:44:52+00:00 2026-05-14T03:44:52+00:00

I’m working on implementing a reasonably simple XML serializer/deserializer (log file parser) application in

  • 0

I’m working on implementing a reasonably simple XML serializer/deserializer (log file parser) application in C# .NET with VS 2008. I have about 50 unit tests right now for various parts of the code (mostly for the various serialization operations), and some of them seem to be failing mostly at random when they deal with file I/O.

The way the tests are structured is that in the test setup method, I create a new empty file at a certain predetermined location, and close the stream I get back. Then I run some basic tests on the file (varying by what exactly is under test). In the cleanup method, I delete the file again.

A large portion (usually 30 or more, though the number varies run to run) of my unit tests will fail at the initialize method, claiming they can’t access the file I’m trying to create. I can’t pin down the exact reason, since a test that will work one run fails the next; they all succeed when run individually.

What’s the problem here? Why can’t I access this file across multiple unit tests?

Relevant methods for a unit test that will fail some of the time:

[TestInitialize()]
public void LogFileTestInitialize()
{
    this.testFolder = 
        System.Environment.GetFolderPath(
            System.Environment.SpecialFolder.LocalApplicationData
        );
    this.testPath = this.testFolder + "\\empty.lfp";
    System.IO.File.Create(this.testPath).Close();
}

[TestMethod()]
public void LogFileConstructorTest()
{
    string filePath = this.testPath;
    LogFile target = new LogFile(filePath);
    Assert.AreNotEqual(null, target);
    Assert.AreEqual(this.testPath, target.filePath);
    Assert.AreEqual("empty.lfp", target.fileName);
    Assert.AreEqual(this.testFolder + "\\empty.lfp.lfpdat", target.metaPath);
}

[TestCleanup()]
public void LogFileTestCleanup()
{
    System.IO.File.Delete(this.testPath);
}

And the LogFile() constructor:

public LogFile(String filePath)
{
    this.entries = new List<Entry>();
    this.filePath = filePath;
    this.metaPath = filePath + ".lfpdat";
    this.fileName = filePath.Substring(filePath.LastIndexOf("\\") + 1);
}

The precise error message:

Initialization method
LogFileParserTester.LogFileTest.LogFileTestInitialize
threw exception.
System.IO.IOException:
System.IO.IOException: The process
cannot access the file
‘C:\Users\<user>\AppData\Local\empty.lfp’
because it is being used by another
process..

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-14T03:44:53+00:00Added an answer on May 14, 2026 at 3:44 am

    You should be mocking the file system access, and not actually reading/writing files in your unit tests.

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