While looking at the source code of System.ServiceModel.Channels.BufferManager, I noticed this method:
void TuneQuotas()
{
if (areQuotasBeingTuned)
return;
bool lockHeld = false;
try
{
try { }
finally
{
lockHeld = Monitor.TryEnter(tuningLock);
}
// Don't bother if another thread already has the lock
if (!lockHeld || areQuotasBeingTuned)
return;
areQuotasBeingTuned = true;
}
finally
{
if (lockHeld)
{
Monitor.Exit(tuningLock);
}
}
//
// DO WORK... (code removed for brevity)
//
areQuotasBeingTuned = false;
}
Obviously, they want only one thread to run TuneQuotas(), and other threads to not wait if it is already being run by another thread. I should note that the code removed was not try protected.
I’m trying to understand the advantages of this method above over just doing this:
void TuneQuotas()
{
if(!Monitor.TryEnter(tuningLock)) return;
//
// DO WORK...
//
Monitor.Exit(tuningLock);
}
Any ideas why they might have bothered with all that? I suspect the way they use the finally blocks is to guard against a thread abort scenario, but I still don’t see the point because, even with all this code, TuneQuotas() would be locked for good if that one thread doesn’t make it all the way to the end to set areQuotasBeingTunes=false, for one reason or another. So is there something cool about this pattern that I’m missing?
EDIT:
As a side note, it seems the method exists in .NET 4.0, which I confirmed using this code running on framework 4 (although I cannot confirm that the content of the method hasn’t changed from what I found on the web):
var buffMgr = BufferManager.CreateBufferManager(1, 1);
var pooledBuffMgrType = buffMgr.GetType()
.GetProperty("InternalBufferManager")
.GetValue(buffMgr, null)
.GetType();
Debug.WriteLine(pooledBuffMgrType.Module.FullyQualifiedName);
foreach (var methodInfo in pooledBuffMgrType
.GetMethods(BindingFlags.Instance | BindingFlags.NonPublic))
{
Debug.WriteLine(methodInfo.Name);
}
which outputs:
C:\Windows\Microsoft.Net\assembly\GAC_MSIL\System.Runtime.DurableInstancing\v4.0_4.0.0.0__3 1bf3856ad364e35\System.Runtime.DurableInstancing.dll
ChangeQuota
DecreaseQuota
FindMostExcessivePool
FindMostStarvedPool
FindPool
IncreaseQuota
TuneQuotas
Finalize
MemberwiseClone
I’ll add some comments:
The simple version you gave does not protect against some problems. At the very least it is not exception-safe (lock won’t be released). Interestingly, the “sophisticated” version, doesn’t either.
This method has been removed from .NET 4.