I'm working in some code that uses exceptions a lot to handle certain error conditions (certainly not the best design by any means, but it's what I'm working with).
When an exception occurs in code, I need an elegant way of cleaning up any open or temporary resources.
This can be performed like this:
try
{
foo();
bar();
}
catch (Exception)
{
// Oops, an error occurred - let's clean up resources
// Any attempt to cleanup non-existent resources will throw
// an exception, so let's wrap this in another try block
try
{
cleanupResourceFoo();
cleanupResourceBar();
}
catch
{
// A resource didn't exist - this is non-fatal so let's drop
// this exception
}
}
Let's say that the foo()
method cleaned up after itself properly, but the bar()
method threw an exception. In the cleanup code, we will call cleanupResourceFoo()
first which itself will throw an exception as the foo
resources have already been cleaned up.
This means that cleanupResourceBar()
won't end up being called and we'll end up with a resource leak.
Of course we could re-write the inner try/catch
block like so:
try
{
cleanupResourceFoo();
}
catch
{
}
try
{
cleanupResourceBar();
}
catch
{
}
but now we're getting pretty ugly.
I come from a C++ background and this is the kind of thing I would normally use RAII for. Any recommendations about an elegant way to handle this in C#?