I have a class that essentially wraps a Stream for reading/writing, but that stream is expected to be managed by the consumer of that class. For ease of use, I use StreamReader and StreamWriter classes to perform I/O operations on the stream. Normally I'd wrap the reader and writer in using
blocks, but I want to avoid closing the reader and writer because doing so also closes the underlying stream and I have to keep it open.
Is it safe in terms of memory/resource management to not close a StreamReader/StreamWriter if I expect the underlying Stream to be managed by the caller? Will the reader and writer be garbage collected when the stream is explicitly closed elsewhere?
public class Wrapper
{
private Stream _underlyingStream;
public Wrapper(Stream underlyingStream)
{
_underlyingStream = underlyingStream;
}
public string GetValue()
{
_underlyingStream.Seek(0, SeekOrigin.Begin);
var reader = new StreamReader(_underlyingStream);
return reader.ReadToEnd(); // we're done, but the stream is not ours to close
}
}
_underlyingStream.Position
and restore it to that position after ReadToEnd() before returning to the caller. (Although, your usage may be such that the caller expects the position to be affected by such a call--and can save the position themselves if it matters.)