1

I have Dll that reads file from disk and returns it's content:

mydll.h:

extern "C" __declspec(dllexport) void InitFile3dPoints(wchar_t* i_file);
extern "C" __declspec(dllexport) int GetNumPointsForSurface(int i_surf_index);
extern "C" __declspec(dllexport) void GetPointsForSurface
    (double* o_result, int i_resultLength, int i_surf_index);

mydll.cpp:

File3dPoints file_3dPoints;

void InitFile3dPoints(wchar_t* i_file) 
          { file_3dPoints = readFile3dObjectFromDisk(i_file) }
int GetNumPointsForSurface(int i_surf_index) 
          { return file_3dPoints[i_surf_index].getNumPoints(); }

void GetPointsForSurface(double* o_result, int i_resultLength, int i_surf_index);
{
  const int num_points = file_3dPoints[i_surf_index].getNumPoints();
  if (num_points < i_resultLength)
    return;

  for (int i = 0; i < num_points; ++i)
    o_result[i] = file_3dPoints[i_surf_index].getPoint(i);
}

client.cs:

IntPtr inst = LoadLibrary("mydll.dll");
InitFile3dPoints(filename);

for (int i = 0; i < n; ++i)
{
  int num_points_for_surface = GetNumPointsForSurface(i);
  double[] points = new double[num_points_for_surface];
  GetPointsForSurface(points, points.Length, i);
  // some code
}
FreeLibrary(inst);

My dll is not thread-safe. One thread can call InitFile3dPoints. And before calling GetPointsForSurface another thread can call InitFile3dPoints. Could you plase advise me how do make it thread-safe? Creating mutex for accessing file_3dPoints will not solve the problem, I need every thread that comes in mydll.cpp to have its copy of file_3dPoints.

Thanks

3 Answers 3

6

There are many options to do that.

First and most important do not use global variables, they're a nightmare (for this and other reasons). Let's start to change InitFile3dPoints signature to allocate the required memory and to return it to the caller (so the address can be used as "handle"):

File3dPoints* InitFile3dPoints(const wchar_t* i_file) 
{
    return readFile3dObjectFromDisk(i_file);
}

Please note that readFile3dObjectFromDisk must return a heap allocated object of type File3dPoints.

Then change each function to accept that pointer:

int GetNumPointsForSurface(const File3dPoints* data, int i_surf_index) 
{
    return *data[i_surf_index].getNumPoints(); 
}

File3dPoints* can be marshaled in C# with IntPtr:

IntPtr inst = LoadLibrary("mydll.dll");
IntPtr data = InitFile3dPoints(filename);

Finally do not forget to add a DisposeFile3dPoints function where you deallocate data:

void DisposeFile3dPoints(File3dPoints* data)
{
    if (data != NULL)
        delete data;
}

In general to make a DLL "thread-safe" (according to the context of your question) you should make each function self-contained (all the data it needs comes from its parameters, it doesn't have any local static variable nor global ones). Please note that this doesn't make it really thread-safe in any wider sense (if, for example, you'll expose a write function to that data then you'll still need to protect access but it can be done more easily in the C# side).

You can do even better wrapping all these functions inside a C# class, users won't even see that:

public class File3D : IDisposable
{
    public File3D(string path)
    {
        // Initialize. Call InitFile3dPoints
    }

    ~File3D()
    {
        // Call Dispose(false)
    }

    public void Dispose()
    {
        Dispose(true);
        GC.SuppressFinalize(this);
    }

    private IntPtr _data;

    private void Dispose(bool disposing)
    {
        // Unmanaged resource, ignore disposing parameter
        // and call DisposeFile3dPoints
    }
}
1
  • great answer, have solved my long lasting problem. Thank you!
    – PeterChen
    Aug 16, 2021 at 17:21
2

Protect access to global variables using a mutex. Better yet, don't use global variables.

2
  • or if possible use std::atomic
    – user1182183
    Jun 3, 2013 at 12:23
  • Don't use std::atomic and don't use a mutex. Simply stop using globals. Locks should be shunned if possible. They hinder scaling. So, in a situation like this where locks are not needed, don't use them! Jun 3, 2013 at 12:30
0

Reorganize your code so that InitFile3dPoint() returns a File3dPoints that you then pass to the other functions as context. The typical approach is to return a pointer to a dynamically allocated instance. You then have to take care of proper ownership and deallocation management, but you make the DLL itself thread-safe even without any mutex.

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