I need to add a third party component to one of our products (which is a windows service that can run 24/7).
The 3PC is a .net library that sits on some hard core C++ loveliness for manipulating images.
The 3PC requires that Initialize and Teardown routines are called for every thread it runs on.
This is fine where we use it in our older software, but this product was written with the .Net thread pool, and pooled workers will exercise the 3PC. I can't figure out how to safely call the Initialize and Teardown routines.
The closest I got was when initializing a ThreadStatic member, to call the 3PC Initialize
method, however I can't manage to call the Teardown
on the same thread the Initialize
was called on.
If I wrap the Initialize
and Teardown
in an object, with the Teardown
called in the objects Finalize method, then the Teardown
will be called by the GC's own Finalize thread, not the thread the object is static to (not to mention the fact that there's no guarantee the Finalizer will ever run).
Obviously I'm worried about leaked resources as the the thread pool manages threads under the covers, I have no idea if or when threads will be destroyed or created, so I've no idea how much the Service could leak over a period of time.
Anyone any ideas? Anything I've missed? Anything else to try?
Thanks
Update
Q: What does Teardown do?
I'm assuming it "Releases some memory", but I honestly have no idea. I tried splunking through the assembly with Reflector but it quickly drops from IL into native machine code. I'm going on the (3rd) party line that this must be done.
It definitely is a subsystem tear down thing.
Also, several years ago we discovered a bug around this component in another Product. The Initializer wasn't being called for every thread which resulted in some very rarely seen Undefined behaviour.
Initialize
andTeardown
before and after every unit of work you run on the thread pool?