233

I am building a class library to interact with an API. I need to call the API and process the XML response. I can see the benefits of using HttpClient for Asynchronous connectivity, but what I am doing is purely synchronous, so I cannot see any significant benefit over using HttpWebRequest.

If anyone can shed any light I would greatly appreciate it. I am not one for using new technology for the sake of it.

3

7 Answers 7

426

but what i am doing is purely synchronous

You could use HttpClient for synchronous requests just fine:

using (var client = new HttpClient())
{
    var response = client.GetAsync("http://google.com").Result;

    if (response.IsSuccessStatusCode)
    {
        var responseContent = response.Content; 

        // by calling .Result you are synchronously reading the result
        string responseString = responseContent.ReadAsStringAsync().Result;

        Console.WriteLine(responseString);
    }
}

As far as why you should use HttpClient over WebRequest is concerned, well, HttpClient is the new kid on the block and could contain improvements over the old client.

19
  • 34
    Wouldn't your synchronous use of the async methods potentially block your UI thread? You may want to consider something like string responseString = Task.Run(() => responseContent.ReadAsStringAsync()).Result; instead if you must make this synchronous.
    – earthling
    Feb 26, 2014 at 19:44
  • 42
    According to this post (blogs.msdn.com/b/pfxteam/archive/2012/04/13/10293638.aspx) calling .Result like this can exhaust the threadpool and cause deadlock. Dec 24, 2014 at 14:36
  • 19
    This code will always deadlock if executed within a task created on the main UI thread by a new TaskFactory(TaskScheduler.FromCurrentSynchronizationContext()
    – Wim Coenen
    Jun 2, 2015 at 13:00
  • 34
    So, how do I use HttpClient synchronously from UI thread? Let's say I purposely want to block UI thread (or I am writing a console app) until I get the HTTP response... So, if Wait(), Result(), etc can cause deadlocks, what's the definite solution for this without the risk of deadlock and without using other classes like WebClient?
    – Dexter
    Feb 6, 2017 at 15:38
  • 15
    @DarinDimitrov I'm sure you've written this answer in good faith. But now, 6 years later, we know this code is a collection of every anti-pattern possible with HttpClient. This code can get someone in a serious trouble. Could you please consider removing it or putting up a disclaimer or doing something else to warn people.
    – Myk
    Mar 7, 2019 at 12:14
32

I'd re-iterate Donny V. answer and Josh's

"The only reason I wouldn't use the async version is if I were trying to support an older version of .NET that does not already have built in async support."

(and upvote if I had the reputation.)

I can't remember the last time if ever, I was grateful of the fact HttpWebRequest threw exceptions for status codes >= 400. To get around these issues you need to catch the exceptions immediately, and map them to some non-exception response mechanisms in your code...boring, tedious and error prone in itself. Whether it be communicating with a database, or implementing a bespoke web proxy, its 'nearly' always desirable that the Http driver just tell your application code what was returned, and leave it up to you to decide how to behave.

Hence HttpClient is preferable.

3
  • 1
    I was surprised that HttpClient itself is a wrapper around HttpWebRequest (that indeed, internally catches those WebException objects and does the conversion to a HttpResponseMessage for you). I would have thought it would be easier to build a new client entirely from scratch.
    – Dai
    Aug 18, 2017 at 0:43
  • 5
    There is plenty of good reasons like not wanting to rewrite your whole codebase just for a very low-level http call that isn't even performance critical (but would introduce async to a million places).
    – FrankyBoy
    Jan 8, 2018 at 12:41
  • In .net core 2 if you want to dynamically evaluate an expression with DynamicExpressionParser it might not be possible to use async; property indexers can't use async; in my situation I need to dynamically evaluate a string like "GetDefaultWelcomeMessage[\"InitialMessage\"]" where this method makes an HttpCall and the index syntax is preferable to method syntax "Util.GetDefaultWelcomeMessage(\"InitialMessage\")"
    – eugen
    Dec 3, 2019 at 15:39
29

For anyone coming across this now, .NET 5.0 has added a synchronous Send method to HttpClient. https://github.com/dotnet/runtime/pull/34948

The merits as to why where discussed at length here: https://github.com/dotnet/runtime/issues/32125

You can therefore use this instead of SendAsync. For example

public string GetValue()
{
    var client = new HttpClient();
            
    var webRequest = new HttpRequestMessage(HttpMethod.Post, "http://your-api.com")
    {
        Content = new StringContent("{ 'some': 'value' }", Encoding.UTF8, "application/json")
    };

    var response = client.Send(webRequest);

    using var reader = new StreamReader(response.Content.ReadAsStream());
            
    return reader.ReadToEnd();
}

This code is just a simplified example - it's not production ready.

11
public static class AsyncHelper  
{
    private static readonly TaskFactory _taskFactory = new
        TaskFactory(CancellationToken.None,
                    TaskCreationOptions.None,
                    TaskContinuationOptions.None,
                    TaskScheduler.Default);

    public static TResult RunSync<TResult>(Func<Task<TResult>> func)
        => _taskFactory
            .StartNew(func)
            .Unwrap()
            .GetAwaiter()
            .GetResult();

    public static void RunSync(Func<Task> func)
        => _taskFactory
            .StartNew(func)
            .Unwrap()
            .GetAwaiter()
            .GetResult();
}

Then

AsyncHelper.RunSync(() => DoAsyncStuff());

if you use that class pass your async method as parameter you can call the async methods from sync methods in a safe way.

it's explained here : https://cpratt.co/async-tips-tricks/

8

If you're building a class library, then perhaps the users of your library would like to use your library asynchronously. I think that's the biggest reason right there.

You also don't know how your library is going to be used. Perhaps the users will be processing lots and lots of requests, and doing so asynchronously will help it perform faster and more efficient.

If you can do so simply, try not to put the burden on the users of your library trying to make the flow asynchronous when you can take care of it for them.

The only reason I wouldn't use the async version is if I were trying to support an older version of .NET that does not already have built in async support.

2
  • I see, so make the class library asynchronous, and allow the users of the system to decide whether to use it async, or to use await and use it synchronously?
    – Ketchup
    Jan 21, 2013 at 9:28
  • erm, await helps to make certain calls asynchronous by returning control to the caller. Jan 21, 2013 at 9:31
6

In my case the accepted answer did not work. I was calling the API from an MVC application which had no async actions.

This is how I managed to make it work:

private static readonly TaskFactory _myTaskFactory = new TaskFactory(CancellationToken.None, TaskCreationOptions.None, TaskContinuationOptions.None, TaskScheduler.Default);
public static T RunSync<T>(Func<Task<T>> func)
    {           
        CultureInfo cultureUi = CultureInfo.CurrentUICulture;
        CultureInfo culture = CultureInfo.CurrentCulture;
        return _myTaskFactory.StartNew<Task<T>>(delegate
        {
            Thread.CurrentThread.CurrentCulture = culture;
            Thread.CurrentThread.CurrentUICulture = cultureUi;
            return func();
        }).Unwrap<T>().GetAwaiter().GetResult();
    }

Then I called it like this:

Helper.RunSync(new Func<Task<ReturnTypeGoesHere>>(async () => await AsyncCallGoesHere(myparameter)));
2
0

In the current era, the shortest answer to this question is quite straightforward: Literally all other prior .NET options other than HttpClient are now deprecated/obsolete.

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