No, I don't think so. Following is a relevant excerpt from the book 'Essential Windows Workflow Foundation'
Although operations on
WorkflowInstance can be invoked on
arbitrary threads, the WF scheduler
hosted within the program instance is
serviced by a single thread. The WF
runtime guarantees that no other
thread can interfere or service the
scheduler while its dispatcher loop is
actively processing work items. To be
clear, the hosting application can
invoke methods of WorkflowInstance on
separate threads concurrently - this
does not affect the scheduler
executing the activities on a
dedicated thread (for an episode of
execution).
EDIT: In order to further investigate the issue, I created a wf with a ParallelActivity which contains two HandleExternalEvent activities. The invoked handler of each activity simply puts its thread to sleep for 3 seconds. In the host program, I created two threads and trigger the two events via the service. Moreover, I subclass the ManualWorkflowSchedulerService in order to track its Schedule method. Here are the results (the time is in 10ths of ms):
Src Time Thread
HOST 7616 1 CreateWorkflow
MWSS 7642 1 Schedule workflow
HOST 8297 12 Trigger event 1 and wait for RunWorkflow
MWSS 8316 12 Schedule workflow
WF 8327 12 Handler 1 Invoked...wait 3 sec
HOST 8327 1 Press any key to exit...
HOST 8767 13 Trigger event 2 and wait for RunWorkflow
MWSS 8784 13 Schedule workflow
WF 38319 12 Handler 1 Completed
WF 38406 12 Handler 2 Invoked...wait 3 sec
WF 68396 12 Handler 2 Completed
HOST 68573 13 RunWorkflow for event 2 completed in 5,98 sec
HOST 68794 12 WorkflowCompleted
HOST 68795 12 RunWorkflow for event 1 completed in 6,05 sec
Some remarks:
- The scheduler always use the thread of the host to schedule the workitem.
- The workflow instance does not always use the thread of the host to execute the activities. If another activity is already executing in a thread, then this thread is used for executing all scheduled activities.
- The execution of the handlers is thread-safe, but both threads wait both handlers to finish!
If the latter is your concern, I would suggest the following posts:
BTW, can you share some info about the scenario that you are facing?