Although I can't find a good reference (I could swear I heard it from Martin Fowler several years ago, but a search of his site came up dry), I'm used to hearing this concept referred to as "freezing" or "freezable". It's normally used in combination with two-legged accounting transactions.
Specifically, an accounting transaction is not created until the corresponding item is frozen, at which point no actions are allowed to be taken on the item which could change the balance. In many cases, no further actions may be taken at all, except possibly for cancellation, which actually doesn't change the frozen item but simply results in a retroactive event being added.
Oddly, Microsoft implemented this in a completely different context with WPF. They use "freezable" primarily to indicate that change notifications are no longer necessary. If you are, in fact, using WPF, you might consider looking at the Freezable class.
Otherwise, if you want a truly generic pattern, I highly suggest you read through Kozmic's Dynamic Proxy Tutorial. Although it's mainly an excuse to show off the features of Castle Proxy, the "freezable" concept is exactly what he chooses to implement, and he shows a way to do this using a generic reusable library without having to write much additional code after the fact.
Although there is quite a lot of code to work out all the kinks, the very basic idea is to just write an interceptor and then create a proxy with it:
internal class FreezableInterceptor : IInterceptor, IFreezable
{
private bool _isFrozen;
public void Freeze()
{
_isFrozen = true;
}
public bool IsFrozen
{
get { return _isFrozen; }
}
public void Intercept(IInvocation invocation)
{
if (_isFrozen && invocation.Method.Name.StartsWith("set_",
StringComparison.OrdinalIgnoreCase))
{
throw new ObjectFrozenException();
}
invocation.Proceed();
}
}
public static TFreezable MakeFreezable<TFreezable>()
where TFreezable : class, new()
{
return _generator.CreateClassProxy<TFreezable>(new FreezableInterceptor());
}
Note that the above is not production-quality code, it's just the intro. You should read more of the linked site for more information.
As far as I know, class/interface proxying is really the only way you can do this in a domain-agnostic way. Otherwise, you're going to have to re-implement the freezable logic for every freezable class - that is to say, putting a lot of if-then
statements in your property setters and throwing an FrozenException
if the status is set.