2
public class SelfCallingTest
{
    private static int counter;

    public void SelfCallingMethod(int counter)
    {
        Console.WriteLine("The input integer is: {0} ", counter);

        counter++;

        while (counter <= 2)
        {
            SelfCallingMethod(counter);
        }
    }
}

The above SelfCallingTest class has a static field name "counter" and the SelfCallingMethod takes an integer parameter named "counter" (same name as static instance member counter) SelfCallingMethod is called from console test application Main() method

static void Main(string[] args)
    {           
        SelfCallingTest sct = new SelfCallingTest();
        sct.SelfCallingMethod(0);

        Console.Read();
    }

Now the problem is that while loop is going in infinite loop because when the value of counter method level variable reaches value = 3 then the thread control is coming out of the method and again resuming while loop execution with method level counter variable getting set to 2 - I am not sure why this counter is set to 2.

As soon as I change the method parameter name counter to other than static instance field name, the results are expected and console is printing 0, 1, 2

Could you please provide me an explanation? Is there a bug in the .NET CLR to read a value from TLS (thread local storage?)

I got what the problem is here, for the initiating callstack for the method SelfCallingMethod, while loop condition is always evaluating 2 ==2 and thats causing the infinite loop.

1
  • Perhaps you meant if instead of while on your recursive call? Mar 20, 2012 at 17:35

2 Answers 2

7

Your code is never using the static field. Look at this loop:

while (counter <= 2)
{
    SelfCallingMethod(counter);
}

counter is a local variable (the parameter). It's then passed by value to SelfCallingMethod, so that method call isn't going to change it. How would you expect to ever exit the loop, other than via an exception?

So what will happen is you'll get a stack with SelfCallingMethod(0), which calls SelfCallingMethod(1) (after the increment) which calls SelfCallingMethod(2) which calls SelfCallingMethod(3). That will increment its copy of the counter (to 4) and return... but then the loop from SelfCallingMethod(2) will just go round and call SelfCallingMethod(3) again. Don't forget that each call of SelfCallingMethod has a separate counter variable.

As soon as I change the method parameter name counter to other than static instance field name, the results are expected and console is printing 0, 1, 2

Yes, because at that point all the code using counter in the method uses the field instead of the local variable. When the names are the same, the local variable hides the static variable. (You could still use SelfCallingTest.counter to access it explicitly though.)

Is there a bug in the .NET CLR to read a value from TLS (thread local storage?)

Absolutely not. The only bug is in your code, I'm afraid.

1
  • I got what the problem is here, for the initiating callstack for the method SelfCallingMethod, while loop condition is always evaluating 2 ==2 and thats causing the infinite loop. Mar 20, 2012 at 22:27
1

The parameter counter is closest in scope - in fact the static variable is never referenced from your code. There is nothing incrementing the counter that you are testing on.

1
  • I got what the problem is here, for the initiating callstack for the method SelfCallingMethod, while loop condition is always evaluating 2 ==2 and thats causing the infinite loop. Mar 20, 2012 at 22:28

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