Are static variable values the same within one session or are their values the same at application server level?
-
It's incorrect question:static object - its common object for full .NET application - its incorrect to tell about him in Session objet or Application obect Web Server context. But answer on your question, one static object - its one common object in all sessions in your web-application.– Sergey ShulikJul 26, 2011 at 13:22
-
1A couple of searches on google/SO would have helped your doubt and saved time. :) The first result on SO gave me this --> stackoverflow.com/questions/853837/static-variables-in-asp-net . Search url --> stackoverflow.com/search?q=asp.net+static+variables– deostrollJul 26, 2011 at 13:24
Add a comment
|
3 Answers
They're at an AppDomain
level - that's the same for all static variables, whether they're in ASP.NET or not.
So:
- If you use the same class from different AppDomains, you'll get separate variables
- If your AppDomain is recycled, you'll get separate variables
- If two requests go to different machines, you'll get separate variables
- If two concurrent requests hit the same AppDomain, they can mess with each other (so things like
count++
aren't safe)
-
I think that last one means there is no locking and that's what may cause dirty reads, right?– Ken DJul 26, 2011 at 13:26
-
1@LordCover: Well, not just dirty reads - but non-atomic increments, unless you're careful.
count++
is a three-stage operation: read, increment, write. Two threads could both read, both increment, and then both write, resulting in a single increment overall. Jul 26, 2011 at 13:28 -
If two requests go to different machines, you'll get separate variables.. is this means that request initiated from 2 different machines?? Jul 26, 2011 at 14:09
-
@Ahsan: No, I mean if you've got a server farm for the web app, and two requests - whether from the same machine or not - hit different web servers. Jul 26, 2011 at 14:11