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Don't Like it? Throw it Out!

Yesterday, I introduced the ICommunicationObject state machine and mentioned that we had a base class called CommunicationObject to take care of some of the state machine details for you.  Today, I'll show off one of the ways that CommunicationObject deals with state.

When you're writing a channel, many of the operations that you'll be implementing are only safe to call when the channel is in a particular state.  As I said before, once a channel has been opened, you can't change any of its configuration settings.  It's a really bad idea to try to read or write from a channel after it's been closed.  It isn't much better to try to read or write from a channel before it's been opened.

You can invent your own reasons for why an operation should only work when in certain states.  CommunicationObject helps you enforce these state requirements with three methods.

 protected void ThrowIfDisposed();
protected void ThrowIfDisposedOrImmutable();
protected void ThrowIfDisposedOrNotOpen();

These methods are almost self-documenting although there are a few quirks.  The first quirk is that all of the methods will throw if the state is Faulted, even though being faulted is not quite the same thing as being disposed.  This is probably what you wanted though because very few channel operations should continue to work after a fault.

Here's how the methods decide whether to throw:

  • ThrowIfDisposed throws if the state is not Created, Opening, or Opened.
  • ThrowIfDisposedOrImmutable throws if the state is not Created.
  • ThrowIfDisposedOrNotOpen throws if the state is not Opened.

And, here's how the methods decide what to throw:

  • If the state is Created, Opening, or Opened, you get InvalidOperationException.
  • If the state is Closing or Closed, you get CommunicationObjectAbortedException if the object was aborted and ObjectDisposedException otherwise.
  • If the state is Faulted, you get CommunicationObjectFaultedException.

Next time: Lifecycle of a Channel

Comments

  • Anonymous
    February 23, 2006
    In the Windows Communication Foundation, there are a few classes that are so fundamental that they are...
  • Anonymous
    February 24, 2006
    In the original post introducing ICommunicationObject I claimed that the abstract base class helps you...
  • Anonymous
    April 07, 2006
    After seeing the ChannelBase class yesterday for implementing a channel, today's post is about the base...
  • Anonymous
    August 15, 2006
    It's hard to believe that I introduced the ICommunicationObject state machine six months ago but never...