CA2003: Do not treat fibers as threads
Applies to: Visual Studio Visual Studio for Mac
Note
This article applies to Visual Studio 2017. If you're looking for the latest Visual Studio documentation, see Visual Studio documentation. We recommend upgrading to the latest version of Visual Studio. Download it here
Item | Value |
---|---|
RuleId | CA2003 |
Category | Microsoft.Reliability |
Breaking change | Non-breaking |
Cause
A managed thread is being treated as a Win32 thread.
Note
This rule has been deprecated. For more information, see Deprecated rules.
Rule description
Do not assume a managed thread is a Win32 thread; it's a fiber. The common language runtime (CLR) runs managed threads as fibers in the context of real threads that are owned by SQL. These threads can be shared across AppDomains and even databases in the SQL Server process. Using managed thread local storage works, but you may not use unmanaged thread local storage or assume that your code will run on the current OS thread again. Do not change settings such as the locale of the thread. Do not call CreateCriticalSection or CreateMutex via P/Invoke because they require that the thread that enters a lock must also exit the lock. Because the thread that enters a lock doesn't exit a lock when you use fibers, Win32 critical sections and mutexes are useless in SQL. You may safely use most of the state on a managed Thread object, including managed thread local storage and the current user interface (UI) culture of the thread. However, for programming model reasons, you won't be able to change the current culture of a thread when you use SQL. This limitation will be enforced through a new permission.
How to fix violations
Examine your usage of threads and change your code accordingly.
When to suppress warnings
Do not suppress this rule.