Per Reflector, the basic rules for setting a transaction time out with the constructors of TransactionScope
are as follows:
The DefaultTimeOut is determined by the first rule from below that is satisfied:
- if the constructor has a
TimeSpan
parameter, the DefaultTimeout is the that parameter
- if the constructor has a
TransactionOption
parameter, the DefaultTimeout is transactionOption.TimeOut
- if the constructor has a
TransactionScopeOption
parameter, the DefaultTimeout is scopeOption.TimeOut
- if the constructor does not have timeout parameter, the DefaultTimeout is the value specified in the app or web config file.
- otherwise, DefaultTimeOut is 1 minute.
The MaxTimeOut is 10 minutes unless another value is specified in the machine.config.
The effective timeout for the transaction is smaller of the MaxTimeOut and DefaultTimeOut that is greater than zero. If both MaxTimeOut and DefaultTimeOut are zero, the effective timeout is the number of ticks represented by long.MaxValue
(the infinity).
If the TransactionScope
instance does not create a new transaction either because a transaction is passed into its constructor, or because the transaction scope option does not require it (e.g., when an ambient transaction is present and the TransactionScopeOption is Required), but a timeOut
parameter is still passed in the constructor, a timer is started. When the timeout period elapses, the underlying transaction's TimeOut()
method is called. The DefaultTimeOut and MaxTimeOut properties are not used in this case.
If the transactionScopeOption == TransactionScopeOption.Supress
, the timeout is ignored and has no effect.
It is also possible to define the MaxTimeOut in the app/web config file, if the relevant section in the machine.config is overridden (note the values of the allowDefintion and allowExeDefinition attributes):
<sectionGroup name="system.transactions" type="System.Transactions.Configuration.TransactionsSectionGroup, System.Transactions, Version=4.0.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=b77a5c561934e089, Custom=null">
<section name="defaultSettings" type="System.Transactions.Configuration.DefaultSettingsSection, System.Transactions, Version=4.0.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=b77a5c561934e089, Custom=null"/>
<section name="machineSettings" type="System.Transactions.Configuration.MachineSettingsSection, System.Transactions, Version=4.0.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=b77a5c561934e089, Custom=null" allowDefinition="MachineToApplication" allowExeDefinition="MachineToApplication"/>
</sectionGroup>
For quick reference, here are the TransactionScope constructors:
public TransactionScope(Transaction transactionToUse, TimeSpan scopeTimeout, EnterpriseServicesInteropOption interopOption);
public TransactionScope(TransactionScopeOption scopeOption, TransactionOptions transactionOptions, EnterpriseServicesInteropOption interopOption);
public TransactionScope(TransactionScopeOption scopeOption, TransactionOptions transactionOptions);
public TransactionScope(TransactionScopeOption scopeOption, TimeSpan scopeTimeout);
public TransactionScope(Transaction transactionToUse, TimeSpan scopeTimeout);
public TransactionScope(TransactionScopeOption scopeOption);