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Synchronizing Data for Multithreading

When multiple threads can make calls to the properties and methods of a single object, it is critical that those calls be synchronized. Otherwise one thread might interrupt what another thread is doing, and the object could be left in an invalid state. A class whose members are protected from such interruptions is called thread-safe.

The Common Language Infrastructure provides several strategies to synchronize access to instance and static members:

The common language runtime provides a thread model in which classes fall into a number of categories that can be synchronized in a variety of different ways depending on the requirements. The following table shows what synchronization support is provided for fields and methods with a given synchronization category.

Category

Global fields

Static fields

Static methods

Instance fields

Instance methods

Specific code blocks

No Synchronization

No

No

No

No

No

No

Synchronized Context

No

No

No

Yes

Yes

No

Synchronized Code Regions

No

No

Only if marked

No

Only if marked

Only if marked

Manual Synchronization

Manual

Manual

Manual

Manual

Manual

Manual

No Synchronization

This is the default for objects. Any thread can access any method or field at any time. Only one thread at a time should access these objects.

Manual Synchronization

The .NET Framework class library provides a number of classes for synchronizing threads. See Overview of Synchronization Primitives.

Synchronized Code Regions

You can use the Monitor class or a compiler keyword to synchronize blocks of code, instance methods, and static methods. There is no support for synchronized static fields.

Both Visual Basic and C# support the marking of blocks of code with a particular language keyword, the lock statement in C# or the SyncLock statement in Visual Basic. When the code is executed by a thread, an attempt is made to acquire the lock. If the lock has already been acquired by another thread, the thread blocks until the lock becomes available. When the thread exits the synchronized block of code, the lock is released, no matter how the thread exits the block.

Note

The lock and SyncLock statements are implemented using Monitor.Enter and Monitor.Exit, so other methods of Monitor can be used in conjunction with them within the synchronized region.

You can also decorate a method with a MethodImplAttribute and MethodImplOptions.Synchronized, which has the same effect as using Monitor or one of the compiler keywords to lock the entire body of the method.

Thread.Interrupt can be used to break a thread out of blocking operations such as waiting for access to a synchronized region of code. Thread.Interrupt is also used to break threads out of operations like Thread.Sleep.

Important noteImportant

Do not lock the type — that is, typeof(MyType) in C#, GetType(MyType) in Visual Basic, or MyType::typeid in C++ — in order to protect static methods (Shared methods in Visual Basic). Use a private static object instead. Similarly, do not use this in C# (Me in Visual Basic) to lock instance methods. Use a private object instead. A class or instance can be locked by code other than your own, potentially causing deadlocks or performance problems.

Compiler Support

Both Visual Basic and C# support a language keyword that uses Monitor.Enter and Monitor.Exit to lock the object. Visual Basic supports the SyncLock statement; C# supports the lock statement.

In both cases, if an exception is thrown in the code block, the lock acquired by the lock or SyncLock is released automatically. The C# and Visual Basic compilers emit a try/finally block with Monitor.Enter at the beginning of the try, and Monitor.Exit in the finally block. If an exception is thrown inside the lock or SyncLock block, the finally handler runs to allow you to do any clean-up work.

Synchronized Context

You can use the SynchronizationAttribute on any ContextBoundObject to synchronize all instance methods and fields. All objects in the same context domain share the same lock. Multiple threads are allowed to access the methods and fields, but only a single thread is allowed at any one time.

See Also

Reference

SyncLock Statement

lock Statement (C# Reference)

SynchronizationAttribute

Concepts

Threads and Threading

Overview of Synchronization Primitives