Problem (simplified to make things clearer):
-
1. there is one statically-linked static.lib that has a function that increments:
extern int CallCount = 0;
int TheFunction()
{
void *p = &CallCount;
printf("Function called");
return CallCount++;
}
2. static.lib is linked into a managed C++/CLI managed.dll that wraps TheFunction method:
int Managed::CallLibFunc()
{
return TheFunction();
}
3. Test app has a reference to managed.dll and creates multiple domains that call C++/CLI wrapper:
static void Main(string[] args)
{
Managed c1 = new Managed();
int val1 = c1.CallLibFunc();
// value is zero
AppDomain ad = AppDomain.CreateDomain("NewDomain");
Managed c = ad.CreateInstanceAndUnwrap(a.FullName, typeof(Managed).FullName) as Managed;
int val2 = c.CallLibFunc();
// value is one
}
Question:
Based on what I have read in Essential .NET Vol1 The CLR by Don Box, I would expect val2 to be zero since a brand new copy of managed.dll/static.lib is loaded when CreateInstanceAndUnwrap is called. Am I misunderstanding what is happening? The static library does not seem to be respecting the appdomain boundaries since it's unmanaged code. Is there a way to get around this issue other than by creating a brand new process for instantiating Managed?
Thank you very much everyone!
