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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 12, 20262026-05-12T11:02:23+00:00 2026-05-12T11:02:23+00:00

I’ve got a static variable (abstract data type, not a primitive) in my C#

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I’ve got a static variable (abstract data type, not a primitive) in my C# ASP.NET project.

It will be read by many threads, concurrently and frequently.

I need to write to it very rarely (compared to number of reads).

What is the best way of ensuring threadsaftey so that whilst im writing to it, other threads aren’t reading partially-written data?

I’ve only ever used lock, but i understand this will prevent concurrent reads 🙁

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-12T11:02:23+00:00Added an answer on May 12, 2026 at 11:02 am

    I’d start off just with lock. Uncontested locks are very cheap. You could use ReaderWriterLockSlim (assuming you’re using .NET 3.5) but a lock is simpler to get right. Optimise it if/when it becomes a problem.

    Straight ReaderWriterLock may well be slower than the simple lock – it’s not as fast as it might be, hence the slim version 🙂

    Just how frequently do you mean by “frequently”? How much contention do you expect? You might want to model it (e.g. simulate a reasonable number of requests) and benchmark no locking vs simple locking, just to see what the overhead is.

    You may be able to use the lock-free option of volatile – but frankly I’ve recently given up on that as too hard for sane people to reason about. (It doesn’t mean what I thought it meant.)

    What are you actually doing with the data? Is the type an immutable type, so once you’ve got the right reference, you can read in a thread-safe way without any locking?

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