5

I expect the following code to deadlock when Clear tries to lock on the same object that Build has already locked:

void Main()
{
    (new SiteMap()).Build();
}

class SiteMap
{
    private readonly object _lock = new object();

    public void Build()
    {
        lock (_lock)
        {
            Clear();

            Console.WriteLine("Build");
        }
    }

    public void Clear()
    {
        lock (_lock)
        {
            Console.WriteLine("Clear");
        }
    }
}

Output:

Clear

Build

Edit 1

Thank you all for your answers.

If I add a call to Build inside the lock of Clear (keeping the rest of the code the same):

public void Clear()
{
    lock (_lock)
    {
        Build();

        Console.WriteLine("Clear");
    }
}

A deadlock does occur (or at least that's what I think, LINQ Pad crashes).

According to your answers, this shouldn't happen, because it's still the same thread.

Thanks!

1

3 Answers 3

8

In C#, a thread holding a lock can enter the same lock without blocking.

The lock statement, as well as the Monitor class on which it is built, is reentrant in .NET.


Edit in response to your edit:

When you add the call to Build inside clear, the code doesn't deadlock - it is calling itself recursively. It's not blocking, but rather running forever (until, eventually, you hit a StackOverflowException), because Build calls Clear which calls Build again which calls Clear, etc....

1
  • Regarding my edit, I really don't know how I didn't see that. Thanks for both answers!
    – stacker
    May 17, 2012 at 18:18
5

The documentation for lock says:

If another thread attempts to enter a locked code, it will wait (block) until the object is released.

The key word is "another". A thread does not block itself, just other threads. If another thread had owned the lock, then lock would block.

This saves a lot of headaches.

4

I will not because clear is called within the same thread which already applied the lock.

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