I'm falling in love with async and await, however I cannot figure out how to await a file open without using Task.Run. There seems to be an API in WRT. Where is the .NET 4.5 equivalent? I ask because if i'm accessing a UNC share on a remote machine this has the potential to block for a very long time if the machine is down or not responding to network requests for some reason. It seems like such a big over site.
using (FileStream stream = await Task.Run(() => new FileStream(@"c:\temp\text.txt", FileMode.OpenOrCreate, FileAccess.Read, FileShare.Read, 4096, true)))
{
byte[] bytesToRead = new byte[stream.Length];
await stream.ReadAsync(bytesToRead, 0, bytesToRead.Length).ConfigureAwait(false);
return bytesToRead;
}
new FileStream
will not begin reading from the stream, there is no reason to useTask.Run
. Your code is already asynchronous when it hitsawait stream.ReadAsync
, which actually starts reading from the stream.Stopwatch sw = Stopwatch.StartNew(); try { new FileStream(@"\\10.1.1.2\c$\test", FileMode.OpenOrCreate, FileAccess.Read, FileShare.Read, 4096, true); } catch (Exception ee) { Trace.WriteLine(ee.Message); } finally { Trace.WriteLine(sw.Elapsed); }
The network path was not found. 00:00:38.5445538 This takes 30 seconds. Under the hood it ends up calling: [link]referencesource.microsoft.com/#mscorlib/microsoft/win32/… which is syncronous.var fs = new FileStream(@"C:\HugeFile.zip", FileMode.Open, FileAccess.Read, FileShare.Read);