12

I have EF helper class that saves changes async:

public async Task<int> SaveOrUpdateAsync<TEntity>(TEntity entity)
        where TEntity : class, IContextEntity
    {
        if (entity.Id == 0)
            context.Set<TEntity>().Add(entity);
        else
        {
            TEntity dbEntry = context.Set<TEntity>().Find(entity.Id);
            if (dbEntry != null) dbEntry = entity;
        }

        return await context.SaveChangesAsync();
    }

public void Save()
{
Task saveEntit1Async = repository.SaveOrUpdateAsync<Entity1>(entity1);
Task saveEntity2Async = repository.SaveOrUpdateAsync<Entity2>(entity2);
Task saveEntity3Async =  repository.SaveOrUpdateAsync<Entity3>(Entity3);

Task.WaitAll(saveEntit1Async, saveEntity2Async, saveEntity3Async);

string test = "test";
)

The call gets stuck on

Task.WaitAll(saveEntit1Async, saveEntity2Async, saveEntity3Async);

line and never gets to

 string test = "test";

But if I run it as:

public void Save()
{
repository.SaveOrUpdateAsync<Entity1>(entity1);
repository.SaveOrUpdateAsync<Entity2>(entity2);
repository.SaveOrUpdateAsync<Entity3>(Entity3);

string test = "test";
)

It works fine, all changes are being saved and it gets to

string test = "test";

Why is

Task.WaitAll(saveEntit1Async, saveEntity2Async, saveEntity3Async);

Freezes up the operation and never passes call to the next line of code (string test = "test";) ?

9
  • 1
    without Task.WaitAll, the system doesn't block the current thread of execution and the next line gets executed, with Task.WaitAll, the current thread will wait untill all the operations are done, then string test = 'test'; gets executed
    – LemonCool
    Apr 4, 2014 at 16:23
  • Right! But why call gets stuck on WaitAll forever! and never gets to the second line? Apr 4, 2014 at 16:26
  • you might have an exception in the task, which might never returns so it will wait forever
    – LemonCool
    Apr 4, 2014 at 16:28
  • You're probably getting deadlocked in the database or hitting some other error. I don't think context is designed to be used from multiple threads as you may end up sharing a database connection. Also, you need to Attach() you updated entity to the context, not just replace the reference as you're doing with dbEntry = entity;
    – dezfowler
    Apr 4, 2014 at 16:30
  • 1
    If you're in an ASP/GUI setting you cannot use Task.Wait() or it's siblings. This will block the request/gui thread, meaning that when the async operation completes, it cannot give control back to the request/gui thread, thus deadlocking your application. If you're gonna use async, use it all the way.
    – sara
    Jan 13, 2016 at 10:52

2 Answers 2

16

I figured it out!

Here is the problem that was happening, when, you wait on the Task with the "Wait" method or take the result directly from the "Result" property of the Task, you block the main thread at the same time. When eventually the Task completes inside that method (SaveOrUpdateAsync(TEntity entity)) in the thread pool, it is going to invoke the continuation to post back to the main thread (as it never left it), because SynchronizationContext.Current is available and captured. But here is a problem: the main thread is blocked by "Wait" method and that is how I was getting a deadlock!

To fix deadlock issue I had to specify to not to continue on captured context for context.SaveChangesAsync().

public async Task<int> SaveOrUpdateAsync<TEntity>(TEntity entity)
        where TEntity : class, IContextEntity
    {
        if (entity.Id == 0)
            context.Set<TEntity>().Add(entity);
        else
        {
            TEntity dbEntry = context.Set<TEntity>().Find(entity.Id);
            if (dbEntry != null) dbEntry = entity;
        }

        return await context.SaveChangesAsync().ConfigureAwait(continueOnCapturedContext: false);
    }
1
  • 1
    Not even using Task.Wait, just await and still had the problem. This snippet fixed my code. Thanks a million.
    – TombMedia
    May 22, 2015 at 20:58
0

perhaps I'm being stupid (!), but why does your code say

if (dbEntry != null) dbEntry = entity;

surely that if statement should be

if (dbEntry == null) dbEntry = entity;

I guess the C# null-coalescing operator would also work to replace both lines

TEntity dbEntry = context.Set<TEntity>().Find(entity.Id) ?? entity;

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