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Been looking for a multi-threading solution for my application, but keep getting random NullReferenceException errors when I try, as opposed to when I ran each one consecutively and everything went smoothly.

What I'm doing is calculating a journey from one place to another, and then calculating the return journey. The return journey calculation is just to use the same process, only with the departure and destinations switched.

Does this sound feasible to do this with multi-threading in an ASP.net MVC3 app with Entity Framework? I've seen a few articles where there seem to be problems with EF, but these sound like they are only an issue when DBContexts are shared on a page, whereas I've used Using statements round all areas where I need to access the database. Anyone have any experience here?

The basic relevant code I have so far is this:

var outboundJourneyTask = Task.Factory.StartNew(() => BuildJourney(true));
var returnJourneyTask = Task.Factory.StartNew(() => BuildJourney(false));
Task.WaitAll(outboundJourneyTask, returnJourneyTask);

What I'd hoped was that each task would start afresh, but due to the null reference exceptions, I believe that in the second thread, it is trying to use arrays built in the first, and when it can't find certain elements, it throws errors.

Does this sound likely? Anyone know of a better way of doing this?

EDIT: I'm trying a different method of threading (see below) but there are really strange things happening with my arrays - looping through them differently and throwing errors

Thread t1 = new Thread(ThreadMethod1);   
t1.Start();

Thread t2 = new Thread(ThreadMethod2);
t2.Start();

void ThreadMethod1(object state)
{
    BuildJourney(false);
    ManualResetEvent mre = (ManualResetEvent)state;
    mre.Set();
}
void ThreadMethod2(object state)
{
    BuildJourney(true);
    ManualResetEvent mre = (ManualResetEvent)state;
    mre.Set();
}

Thanks

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    How does your BuildJourney method looks like? Aug 23, 2012 at 14:54
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    It is big - too big to post here as it contains a lot of other functions and calculations! It takes about 7-10 seconds to process, which is why I want them to run concurrently. It contains a few database calls, several calculations and returns a generic list of viewmodels.
    – e-on
    Aug 23, 2012 at 15:00
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    But in such case we can hardly help you if we don't know what resources your call can share. Aug 23, 2012 at 15:01
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    Yes I appreciate that. i'll have to post the code up somewhere external - it's far too much to be able to make sense of in a code block here. Now, I admit my understanding of threading isn't great, but I presumed that you would be able to make it so a new thread was completely separate i.e. they don't share any resources. Do you know if this is possible?
    – e-on
    Aug 23, 2012 at 15:05
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    Yes, it is possible. "don't share any resources" is the key part - they can share resouces in a thread-safe (read-only, locked, not relying on state) manner.
    – Igor
    Aug 23, 2012 at 15:27

1 Answer 1

4

"Does this sound feasible..?" Yes, most certainly.

Easy to implement..... maybe not.

Thread t1 = new Thread(ThreadMethod1)

is an outdated but not necessarily deprecated way to do multithreading in .net 4+ framework. From what you have posted there is nothing indicating that you can't use tasks. Task factory is more modern way of managing Tasks in TPL but I have found it to have some quirks, personally. If I were you I would try doing this:

   Task T = new Task(() =>
                {
                   BuildJourney(true);
                });
                Task T2 = T.ContinueWith((antecedent) =>
                {
                     BuildJourney(false);
                });

This will ensure that T2 only runs when T1 comes back. Though, as Ladislav has said the method BuildJourney may not be thread-safe. This will at least get you one step further in determining where your thread failure is. You may want to investigate proper async and multi-threaded debugging. It is a little more complex than simply F5. Sites like pluralsight and the code project have very good tutorials on debugging and writing .net threaded programming.

You have a very good start here. Good luck!

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    The more I noodle what is going on, the more I think that your BuildJourney class can't run multi-threaded. Not without some changes at least. The above code will work if you only want one instance of Buildjourney to run outside of the main thread at a time. You will probably have to refactor BuildJourney. Also, the more complex a method, the less likely it is to be thread safe. Aug 23, 2012 at 16:32
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    Indeed - I think you're absolutely right there. Judging by that MSDN library link you posted, there are quite a few things in all my processes that aren't thread safe, which would account for the bizarre errors I'm getting when I run it in a thread. I think I will need to refactor, but I'm nearly at the point of going live with this project - I just wanted to make it faster, so whether I refactor now or after we go live is a choice I might make over a beer tonight! Thanks for your answer Sean, very helpful.
    – e-on
    Aug 23, 2012 at 16:38
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    Just the sheer volume of data is holding things up - I've used the profiler to get the time down from a minute and a half initially down to around 7-10 seconds, so I've done ok. I use ajax and partial views so the data gets displayed as the algorithm completes each section, but it would be good to have both functions done within 10 seconds. I may leave that for a "phase 2 amendment" though!
    – e-on
    Aug 23, 2012 at 16:50
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    Definitley a good idea. There are some nuget Lint packages that might help even further. Is your data coming from a DB? If it is what kind? Do you have the ability to make any DB improvements? Aug 23, 2012 at 16:54
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    It's sql server - the db calls are quick as it's indexed everywhere required, but the processing required adds the time on. I'll check out the Lint packages though - that may help further. Thanks again
    – e-on
    Aug 23, 2012 at 17:00

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