10

I am writing a Stream class and am blocked in the ReadAsync method. Please take a look at the code, I think it can explain the situation better that I can do it with my English.

public override Task<int> ReadAsync(byte[] buffer, int offset, int count, System.Threading.CancellationToken cancellationToken)
{
    if (!cancellationToken.IsCancellationRequested)
    {
        return _connection.ReceiveAsync(new ArraySegment<byte>(buffer, offset, count));
    }
    return // <---------------    what here?
}

Using ILSpy I can see that other Stream classes return a cancelled task as follow:

return new Task<TResult>(true, default(TResult), TaskCreationOptions.None, cancellationToken); 

However that Task's constructor is internal and I cannot invoke it.

Google didn't help me at all.

2 Answers 2

16

The next version of .Net (v4.5.3) is adding a way to create a cancelled task leveraging that internal constructor. There are both a generic and non-generic versions:

var token = new CancellationToken(true);
Task task = Task.FromCanceled(token);
Task<int> genericTask = Task.FromCanceled<int>(token);

Keep in mind that the CancellationToken being used must be canceled before calling FromCanceled

0
15

The most direct way I know to create a canceled task is to use a TaskCompletionSource:

var tcs = new TaskCompletionSource<int>();
tcs.TrySetCanceled();
return tcs.Task;

If you haven't used it before, TaskCompletionSource provides a "promise-style" task, which basically allows you to say, "Here, take this Task now, and I'll provide the result (or report an error/cancellation) whenever I'm ready." It's useful when you want to schedule/coordinate work yourself, as opposed to simply relying on a TaskScheduler.

Alternatively, if you rewrite your method using async/await, you can force the cancellation exception to automatically propagate to the result Task:

public async override Task<int> ReadAsync(
    byte[] buffer,
    int offset,
    int count,
    CancellationToken cancellationToken)
{
    cancellationToken.ThrowIfCancellationRequested();

    return await _connection.ReceiveAsync(
        new ArraySegment<byte>(
            buffer,
            offset,
            count));
}
2
  • I don't like the idea of calling ThrowIfCancellationRequested because of the necessary runtime expense of throwing an exception and unwinding the stack - when I could just do if( token.IsCancelationRequested ) return Task.FromCanceled( token ) but how do I do that in an async method?
    – Dai
    Aug 18, 2017 at 0:01
  • @Dai You can't; once you mark the method as async Task<T>, you must return a T. I wouldn't worry about the overhead of throwing the exception. Optimize for the common case. Cancellation should be uncommon. This is the idiomatic way to propagate cancellation within an async method. Aug 19, 2017 at 1:30

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