18

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
    }
}
2
  • 2
    This question might help: stackoverflow.com/questions/1862261/…
    – Anon.
    Dec 16, 2010 at 22:09
  • 1
    Not related to the question, but since the wrapper does not "own" the stream, you might want to also save the original _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.)
    – Rob Parker
    Mar 22, 2016 at 22:49

3 Answers 3

4

If nobody closes the streams then ultimately the finalizer will be called which should call dispose and close them upon GC. But that's quite a crap-shoot resource-wise because it leaves whatever possibly-expensive resources allocated until GC. It could get worse the longer your object lives, especially if it survives collections to be promoted to gen 1 or even 2.

It sure would be nice if you could present something to your caller that isolates this. Perhaps you can cache something from the stream so you can close it while still serving the content to your caller?

EDIT after your edit: Now that I see your caller PASSES you a stream to operate on, my answer has to be different! It's very clear that your caller should be managing the stream's lifetime. I had the impression at first that your class created a stream and hoped the caller managed it.

0
1

The easiest way to solve this is to wrap the stream in your own class that derives from System.IO.Stream

Example: http://csharptest.net/browse/src/Library/IO/NonClosingStream.cs

0

It is definetelly not ok. read this from msdn

The close calls the Dispose method passing a true value. Flushing the stream will not flush its underlying encoder unless you explicitly call Close.

Try to encapsulate all IO in a class.

2
  • I don't quite follow that. Why is not flushing the underlying encoder a bad thing? Do you have any links handy on what it is?
    – Adam Lear
    Dec 16, 2010 at 22:19
  • 1
    Flushing is one thing, but it's annoying that the disposal of the wrapper always disposes the stream, too. You generally still want to access that from a higher level.
    – Nyerguds
    Mar 15, 2016 at 11:51

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