676

When you have server-side code (i.e. some ApiController) and your functions are asynchronous - so they return Task<SomeObject> - is it considered best practice that any time you await functions that you call ConfigureAwait(false)?

I had read that it is more performant since it doesn't have to switch thread contexts back to the original thread context. However, with ASP.NET Web Api, if your request is coming in on one thread, and you await some function and call ConfigureAwait(false) that could potentially put you on a different thread when you are returning the final result of your ApiController function.

I've typed up an example of what I am talking about below:

public class CustomerController : ApiController
{
    public async Task<Customer> Get(int id)
    {
        // you are on a particular thread here
        var customer = await GetCustomerAsync(id).ConfigureAwait(false);
        
        // now you are on a different thread!  will that cause problems?
        return customer;
    }
}

4 Answers 4

767

Update: ASP.NET Core does not have a SynchronizationContext. If you are on ASP.NET Core, it does not matter whether you use ConfigureAwait(false) or not.

For ASP.NET "Full" or "Classic" or whatever, the rest of this answer still applies.

Original post (for non-Core ASP.NET):

This video by the ASP.NET team has the best information on using async on ASP.NET.

I had read that it is more performant since it doesn't have to switch thread contexts back to the original thread context.

This is true with UI applications, where there is only one UI thread that you have to "sync" back to.

In ASP.NET, the situation is a bit more complex. When an async method resumes execution, it grabs a thread from the ASP.NET thread pool. If you disable the context capture using ConfigureAwait(false), then the thread just continues executing the method directly. If you do not disable the context capture, then the thread will re-enter the request context and then continue to execute the method.

So ConfigureAwait(false) does not save you a thread jump in ASP.NET; it does save you the re-entering of the request context, but this is normally very fast. ConfigureAwait(false) could be useful if you're trying to do a small amount of parallel processing of a request, but really TPL is a better fit for most of those scenarios.

However, with ASP.NET Web Api, if your request is coming in on one thread, and you await some function and call ConfigureAwait(false) that could potentially put you on a different thread when you are returning the final result of your ApiController function.

Actually, just doing an await can do that. Once your async method hits an await, the method is blocked but the thread returns to the thread pool. When the method is ready to continue, any thread is snatched from the thread pool and used to resume the method.

The only difference ConfigureAwait makes in ASP.NET is whether that thread enters the request context when resuming the method.

I have more background information in my MSDN article on SynchronizationContext and my async intro blog post.

42
  • 25
    Thread-local storage isn't flowed by any context. HttpContext.Current is flowed by the ASP.NET SynchronizationContext, which is flowed by default when you await, but it's not flowed by ContinueWith. OTOH, the execution context (including security restrictions) is the context mentioned in CLR via C#, and it is flowed by both ContinueWith and await (even if you use ConfigureAwait(false)). Nov 21, 2012 at 17:15
  • 79
    Wouldn't it be great if C# had native language support for ConfigureAwait(false)? Something like 'awaitnc' (await no context). Typing out a separate method call everywhere is pretty annoying. :) May 8, 2014 at 19:36
  • 29
    @NathanAldenSr: It was discussed quite a bit. The problem with a new keyword is that ConfigureAwait actually only makes sense when you await tasks, whereas await acts on any "awaitable." Other options considered were: Should the default behavior discard context if in a library? Or have a compiler setting for the default context behavior? Both of these were rejected because it's harder to just read the code and tell what it does. May 8, 2014 at 20:32
  • 11
    @AnshulNigam: Which is why controller actions need their context. But most methods that the actions call do not. May 28, 2014 at 10:53
  • 15
    @JonathanRoeder: Generally speaking, you shouldn't need ConfigureAwait(false) to avoid a Result/Wait-based deadlock because on ASP.NET you should not be using Result/Wait in the first place. Sep 9, 2014 at 18:57
153

Brief answer to your question: No. You shouldn't call ConfigureAwait(false) at the application level like that.

TL;DR version of the long answer: If you are writing a library where you don't know your consumer and don't need a synchronization context (which you shouldn't in a library I believe), you should always use ConfigureAwait(false). Otherwise, the consumers of your library may face deadlocks by consuming your asynchronous methods in a blocking fashion. This depends on the situation.

Here is a bit more detailed explanation on the importance of ConfigureAwait method (a quote from my blog post):

When you are awaiting on a method with await keyword, compiler generates bunch of code in behalf of you. One of the purposes of this action is to handle synchronization with the UI (or main) thread. The key component of this feature is the SynchronizationContext.Current which gets the synchronization context for the current thread. SynchronizationContext.Current is populated depending on the environment you are in. The GetAwaiter method of Task looks up for SynchronizationContext.Current. If current synchronization context is not null, the continuation that gets passed to that awaiter will get posted back to that synchronization context.

When consuming a method, which uses the new asynchronous language features, in a blocking fashion, you will end up with a deadlock if you have an available SynchronizationContext. When you are consuming such methods in a blocking fashion (waiting on the Task with Wait method or taking the result directly from the Result property of the Task), you will block the main thread at the same time. When eventually the Task completes inside that method in the threadpool, it is going to invoke the continuation to post back to the main thread because SynchronizationContext.Current is available and captured. But there is a problem here: the UI thread is blocked and you have a deadlock!

Also, here are two great articles for you which are exactly for your question:

Finally, there is a great short video from Lucian Wischik exactly on this topic: Async library methods should consider using Task.ConfigureAwait(false).

18
  • 2
    "The GetAwaiter method of Task looks up for SynchronizationContext.Current. If current synchronization context is not null, the continuation that gets passed to that awaiter will get posted back to that synchronization context." - I'm getting the impression that you're trying to say that Task walks the stack to get the SynchronizationContext, which is wrong. The SynchronizationContext is grabbed before the call to the Task and then the rest of the code is continued on the SynchronizationContext if SynchronizationContext.Current is not null.
    – casperOne
    Nov 21, 2012 at 15:15
  • 2
    @casperOne I have intended to say the same.
    – tugberk
    Nov 21, 2012 at 16:53
  • 8
    Shouldn’t it be the responsibility of the caller to ensure that SynchronizationContext.Current is clear / or that the library is called within a Task.Run() instead of having to write .ConfigureAwait(false) all over the class library?
    – binki
    Dec 30, 2014 at 3:43
  • 1
    @binki - on the other hand: (1) presumably a library is used in many applications, so doing effort one-time in the library to make it easier on applications is cost-effective; (2) presumably the library author knows he has written code that has no reason to require continuing on the original context, which he expresses by those .ConfigureAwait(false)s. Perhaps it would be easier for library authors if that were the default behavior, but I would presume that making it a little bit harder to write a library correctly is better than making it a little bit harder to write an app correctly. Sep 21, 2015 at 19:27
  • 4
    Why should the author of a library coddle the consumer? If the consumer wants to deadlock, why should I prevent them?
    – Quark Soup
    Jul 25, 2018 at 15:56
36

The biggest draw back I've found with using ConfigureAwait(false) is that the thread culture is reverted to the system default. If you've configured a culture e.g ...

<system.web>
    <globalization culture="en-AU" uiCulture="en-AU" />    
    ...

and you're hosting on a server whose culture is set to en-US, then you will find before ConfigureAwait(false) is called CultureInfo.CurrentCulture will return en-AU and after you will get en-US. i.e.

// CultureInfo.CurrentCulture ~ {en-AU}
await xxxx.ConfigureAwait(false);
// CultureInfo.CurrentCulture ~ {en-US}

If your application is doing anything which requires culture specific formatting of data, then you'll need to be mindful of this when using ConfigureAwait(false).

2
  • 43
    Modern versions of .NET (I think since 4.6?) will propagate culture across threads, even if ConfigureAwait(false) is used. Jun 22, 2017 at 12:49
  • 4
    Thanks for the info. We are indeed using .net 4.5.2
    – Mick
    Jun 23, 2017 at 1:15
14

I have some general thoughts about the implementation of Task:

  1. Task is disposable yet we are not supposed to use using.
  2. ConfigureAwait was introduced in 4.5. Task was introduced in 4.0.
  3. .NET Threads always used to flow the context (see C# via CLR book) but in the default implementation of Task.ContinueWith they do not b/c it was realised context switch is expensive and it is turned off by default.
  4. The problem is a library developer should not care whether its clients need context flow or not hence it should not decide whether flow the context or not.
  5. [Added later] The fact that there is no authoritative answer and proper reference and we keep fighting on this means someone has not done their job right.

I have got a few posts on the subject but my take - in addition to Tugberk's nice answer - is that you should turn all APIs asynchronous and ideally flow the context . Since you are doing async, you can simply use continuations instead of waiting so no deadlock will be cause since no wait is done in the library and you keep the flowing so the context is preserved (such as HttpContext).

Problem is when a library exposes a synchronous API but uses another asynchronous API - hence you need to use Wait()/Result in your code.

8
  • 6
    1) You can call Task.Dispose if you want; you just don't need to the vast majority of the time. 2) Task was introduced in .NET 4.0 as part of the TPL, which did not need ConfigureAwait; when async was added, they reused the existing Task type instead of inventing a new Future. Nov 21, 2012 at 13:48
  • 6
    3) You're confusing two different types of "context". The "context" mentioned in C# via CLR is always flowed, even in Tasks; the "context" controlled by ContinueWith is a SynchronizationContext or TaskScheduler. These different contexts are explained in detail on Stephen Toub's blog. Nov 21, 2012 at 13:49
  • 21
    4) The library author doesn't need to care whether its callers need the context flow, because each asynchronous method resumes independently. So if the callers need the context flow, they can flow it, regardless of whether the library author flowed it or not. Nov 21, 2012 at 13:49
  • 1
    At first, you seem to be complaining instead of answering the question. And then you're talking about “the context”, except there are several kinds of context in .Net and it's really not clear which one (or ones?) are you talking about. And even if you're not confused yourself (but I think you are, I believe there is no context that used to flow with Threads, but doesn't anymore with ContinueWith()), this makes your answer confusing to read.
    – svick
    Nov 21, 2012 at 21:45
  • 1
    @StephenCleary yes, lib dev should not need to know, it is down to the client. I thought I made it clear, but my phrasing was not clear.
    – Aliostad
    Nov 22, 2012 at 9:05

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.