532

The await keyword in C# (.NET Async CTP) is not allowed from within a lock statement.

From MSDN:

An await expression cannot be used in a synchronous function, in a query expression, in the catch or finally block of an exception handling statement, in the block of a lock statement, or in an unsafe context.

I assume this is either difficult or impossible for the compiler team to implement for some reason.

I attempted a work around with the using statement:

class Async
{
    public static async Task<IDisposable> Lock(object obj)
    {
        while (!Monitor.TryEnter(obj))
            await TaskEx.Yield();

        return new ExitDisposable(obj);
    }

    private class ExitDisposable : IDisposable
    {
        private readonly object obj;
        public ExitDisposable(object obj) { this.obj = obj; }
        public void Dispose() { Monitor.Exit(this.obj); }
    }
}

// example usage
using (await Async.Lock(padlock))
{
    await SomethingAsync();
}

However this does not work as expected. The call to Monitor.Exit within ExitDisposable.Dispose seems to block indefinitely (most of the time) causing deadlocks as other threads attempt to acquire the lock. I suspect the unreliability of my work around and the reason await statements are not allowed in lock statement are somehow related.

Does anyone know why await isn't allowed within the body of a lock statement?

5

10 Answers 10

520

I assume this is either difficult or impossible for the compiler team to implement for some reason.

No, it is not at all difficult or impossible to implement -- the fact that you implemented it yourself is a testament to that fact. Rather, it is an incredibly bad idea and so we don't allow it, so as to protect you from making this mistake.

call to Monitor.Exit within ExitDisposable.Dispose seems to block indefinitely (most of the time) causing deadlocks as other threads attempt to acquire the lock. I suspect the unreliability of my work around and the reason await statements are not allowed in lock statement are somehow related.

Correct, you have discovered why we made it illegal. Awaiting inside a lock is a recipe for producing deadlocks.

I'm sure you can see why: arbitrary code runs between the time the await returns control to the caller and the method resumes. That arbitrary code could be taking out locks that produce lock ordering inversions, and therefore deadlocks.

Worse, the code could resume on another thread (in advanced scenarios; normally you pick up again on the thread that did the await, but not necessarily) in which case the unlock would be unlocking a lock on a different thread than the thread that took out the lock. Is that a good idea? No.

I note that it is also a "worst practice" to do a yield return inside a lock, for the same reason. It is legal to do so, but I wish we had made it illegal. We're not going to make the same mistake for "await".

15
  • 289
    How do you handle a scenario where you need to return a cache entry, and if the entry does not exist you need to compute asynchronously the content then add+return the entry, making sure nobody else calls you in the meantime ?
    – Softlion
    Commented Aug 25, 2012 at 5:32
  • 17
    I realise I'm late to the party here, however I was surprised to see that you put deadlocks as the primary reason why this is a bad idea. I had come to the conclusion in my own thinking that the re-entrant nature of lock/Monitor would be a bigger part of the problem. That is, you queue two tasks to the thread pool which lock(), that in a synchronous world would execute on separate threads. But now with await (if allowed I mean) you could have two tasks executing within the lock block because the thread was reused. Hilarity ensues. Or did I misunderstand something? Commented Dec 12, 2012 at 22:56
  • 5
    @GarethWilson: I talked about deadlocks because the question asked was about deadlocks. You are correct that bizarre re-entrancy issues are possible and seem likely. Commented Dec 12, 2012 at 23:10
  • 17
    @Eric Lippert. Given that the SemaphoreSlim.WaitAsync class was added to the .NET framework well after you posted this answer, I think we can safely assume that it is possible now. Regardless of this, your comments about the difficulty of implementing such a construct are still entirely valid.
    – Contango
    Commented Sep 12, 2014 at 8:34
  • 16
    "arbitrary code runs between the time the await returns control to the caller and the method resumes" - surely this is true of any code, even in the absence of async/await, in a multithreaded context: other threads may execute arbitrary code at any time, and said arbitrary code as you say "could be taking out locks that produce lock ordering inversions, and therefore deadlocks." So why is this of particular significance with async/await? I understand the second point re "the code could resume on another thread" of being of particular significance to async/await.
    – bacar
    Commented Sep 28, 2016 at 22:12
467

Use the SemaphoreSlim.WaitAsync method.

 await mySemaphoreSlim.WaitAsync();
 try {
     await Stuff();
 } finally {
     mySemaphoreSlim.Release();
 }
11
  • 24
    As this method was introduced into the .NET framework recently, I think we can assume that the concept of locking in an async/await world is now well proven.
    – Contango
    Commented Sep 12, 2014 at 8:41
  • 10
    For some more info, search for the text "SemaphoreSlim" in this article: Async/Await - Best Practices in Asynchronous Programming
    – BobbyA
    Commented Jun 23, 2017 at 20:28
  • 40
    Shouldn't it be initialized as mySemaphoreSlim = new SemaphoreSlim(1, 1) in order to work like lock(...)?
    – Serg
    Commented May 2, 2018 at 16:14
  • 6
    Added the extended version of this answer: stackoverflow.com/a/50139704/1844247
    – Serg
    Commented May 2, 2018 at 16:53
  • 3
    @JamesKo that's the whole point of using a semaphore as a mutex. Only one task should execute Stuff, therefore all other tasks have to wait for the previous task to release lock and take their turn into acquiring it one by one. It's like a bunch of people waiting outside the toilet to use it (having one toilet only). When they say to their friends "i'm going to the toilet" it doesn't mean they go and come back instantly. It means they go, wait for all others to finish, then use the toilet and come back. Commented Jun 22, 2018 at 11:35
96

This is just an extension to this answer by user1639030.


Basic Version


using System;
using System.Threading;
using System.Threading.Tasks;

public class SemaphoreLocker
{
    private readonly SemaphoreSlim _semaphore = new SemaphoreSlim(1, 1);

    public async Task LockAsync(Func<Task> worker)
    {
        await _semaphore.WaitAsync();
        try
        {
            await worker();
        }
        finally
        {
            _semaphore.Release();
        }
    }

    // overloading variant for non-void methods with return type (generic T)
    public async Task<T> LockAsync<T>(Func<Task<T>> worker)
    {
        await _semaphore.WaitAsync();
        try
        {
            return await worker();
        }
        finally
        {
            _semaphore.Release();
        }
    }
}

Usage:

public class Test
{
    private static readonly SemaphoreLocker _locker = new SemaphoreLocker();

    public async Task DoTest()
    {
        await _locker.LockAsync(async () =>
        {
            // [async] calls can be used within this block 
            // to handle a resource by one thread. 
        });
        // OR
        var result = await _locker.LockAsync(async () =>
        {
            // [async] calls can be used within this block 
            // to handle a resource by one thread. 
        });
    }
}

Extended Version


A version of the LockAsync method that claims to be completely deadlock-safe (from the 4th revision suggested by Jez).

using System;
using System.Threading;
using System.Threading.Tasks;

public class SemaphoreLocker
{
    private readonly SemaphoreSlim _semaphore = new SemaphoreSlim(1, 1);

    public async Task LockAsync(Func<Task> worker)
    {
        var isTaken = false;
        try
        {
            do
            {
                try
                {
                }
                finally
                {
                    isTaken = await _semaphore.WaitAsync(TimeSpan.FromSeconds(1));
                }
            }
            while (!isTaken);
            await worker();
        }
        finally
        {
            if (isTaken)
            {
                _semaphore.Release();
            }
        }
    }

    // overloading variant for non-void methods with return type (generic T)
    public async Task<T> LockAsync<T>(Func<Task<T>> worker)
    {
        var isTaken = false;
        try
        {
            do
            {
                try
                {
                }
                finally
                {
                    isTaken = await _semaphore.WaitAsync(TimeSpan.FromSeconds(1));
                }
            }
            while (!isTaken);
            return await worker();
        }
        finally
        {
            if (isTaken)
            {
                _semaphore.Release();
            }
        }
    }
}

Usage:

public class Test
{
    private static readonly SemaphoreLocker _locker = new SemaphoreLocker();

    public async Task DoTest()
    {
        await _locker.LockAsync(async () =>
        {
            // [async] calls can be used within this block 
            // to handle a resource by one thread. 
        });
        // OR
        var result = await _locker.LockAsync(async () =>
        {
            // [async] calls can be used within this block 
            // to handle a resource by one thread. 
        });
    }
}
19
  • 7
    It can be dangerous to get the semaphore lock outside the try block - if an exception happens between WaitAsync and try the semaphore will be never released (deadlock). On the other hand, moving WaitAsync call into the try block will introduce another issue, when the semaphore can be released without a lock being acquired. See the related thread where this problem was explained: stackoverflow.com/a/61806749/7889645
    – AndreyCh
    Commented May 14, 2020 at 20:24
  • 3
    @Nikolai thank you for participating! You're right, but I haven't been using async/await as well for more than a year since I've shifted my technology stack a bit. By the way, what do you think of AndreyCh's comment? I really didn't have time to go into his remark and say anything about it.
    – Serg
    Commented Jun 30, 2020 at 16:48
  • 2
    @Jez I think that your modification (4th revision) deviates too much from the OP's original answer. I would suggest to post it as a separate answer, so that it can be evaluated (voted) on its own merit. Commented Feb 25, 2023 at 18:32
  • 1
    @Jez (your version) has a lot more code, that exists for not obvious reasons, and introduces not obvious performance implications. And is accompanied by zero explanation/documentation. This is a five year old answer, that has been evaluated positively for its usefulness and its simplicity. Had it been authored from the start as complex as you suggest, it wouldn't have a tenth of its current upvotes. You are welcome to prove me wrong by posting your suggestion as a separate answer. Commented Feb 25, 2023 at 19:05
  • 1
    @TheodorZoulias I've posted my own answer as I extended it further to be usable either synchronously or asynchronously. Nice to be able to just always use this instead of lock I think.
    – Jez
    Commented Feb 26, 2023 at 13:22
82

Basically it would be the wrong thing to do.

There are two ways this could be implemented:

  • Keep hold of the lock, only releasing it at the end of the block.
    This is a really bad idea as you don't know how long the asynchronous operation is going to take. You should only hold locks for minimal amounts of time. It's also potentially impossible, as a thread owns a lock, not a method - and you may not even execute the rest of the asynchronous method on the same thread (depending on the task scheduler).

  • Release the lock in the await, and reacquire it when the await returns
    This violates the principle of least astonishment IMO, where the asynchronous method should behave as closely as possible like the equivalent synchronous code - unless you use Monitor.Wait in a lock block, you expect to own the lock for the duration of the block.

So basically there are two competing requirements here - you shouldn't be trying to do the first here, and if you want to take the second approach you can make the code much clearer by having two separated lock blocks separated by the await expression:

// Now it's clear where the locks will be acquired and released
lock (foo)
{
}
var result = await something;
lock (foo)
{
}

So by prohibiting you from awaiting in the lock block itself, the language is forcing you to think about what you really want to do, and making that choice clearer in the code that you write.

4
  • 7
    Given that the SemaphoreSlim.WaitAsync class was added to the .NET framework well after you posted this answer, I think we can safely assume that it is possible now. Regardless of this, your comments about the difficulty of implementing such a construct are still entirely valid.
    – Contango
    Commented Sep 12, 2014 at 8:37
  • 11
    @Contango: Well that's not quite the same thing. In particular, the semaphore isn't tied to a specific thread. It achieves similar goals to lock, but there are significant differences.
    – Jon Skeet
    Commented Sep 12, 2014 at 12:43
  • @JonSkeet i know this is a veryyy old thread and all, but i am not sure how the something() call is protected using those locks in the second way ? when a thread is executing something() any other thread can get involve in it as well ! Am i missing something here ?
    – user5699258
    Commented Jul 11, 2019 at 9:10
  • 1
    @Joseph: It's not protected at that point. It's the second approach, which makes it clear that you're acquiring/releasing, then acquiring/releasing again, possibly on a different thread. Because the first approach is a bad idea, as per Eric's answer.
    – Jon Skeet
    Commented Jul 11, 2019 at 9:17
20

This referes to Building Async Coordination Primitives, Part 6: AsyncLock , http://winrtstoragehelper.codeplex.com/ , Windows 8 app store and .net 4.5

Here is my angle on this:

The async/await language feature makes many things fairly easy but it also introduces a scenario that was rarely encounter before it was so easy to use async calls: reentrance.

This is especially true for event handlers, because for many events you don't have any clue about whats happening after you return from the event handler. One thing that might actually happen is, that the async method you are awaiting in the first event handler, gets called from another event handler still on the same thread.

Here is a real scenario I came across in a windows 8 App store app: My app has two frames: coming into and leaving from a frame I want to load/safe some data to file/storage. OnNavigatedTo/From events are used for the saving and loading. The saving and loading is done by some async utility function (like http://winrtstoragehelper.codeplex.com/). When navigating from frame 1 to frame 2 or in the other direction, the async load and safe operations are called and awaited. The event handlers become async returning void => they cant be awaited.

However, the first file open operation (lets says: inside a save function) of the utility is async too and so the first await returns control to the framework, which sometime later calls the other utility (load) via the second event handler. The load now tries to open the same file and if the file is open by now for the save operation, fails with an ACCESSDENIED exception.

A minimum solution for me is to secure the file access via a using and an AsyncLock.

private static readonly AsyncLock m_lock = new AsyncLock();
...

using (await m_lock.LockAsync())
{
    file = await folder.GetFileAsync(fileName);
    IRandomAccessStream readStream = await file.OpenAsync(FileAccessMode.Read);
    using (Stream inStream = Task.Run(() => readStream.AsStreamForRead()).Result)
    {
        return (T)serializer.Deserialize(inStream);
    }
}

Please note that his lock basically locks down all file operation for the utility with just one lock, which is unnecessarily strong but works fine for my scenario.

Here is my test project: a windows 8 app store app with some test calls for the original version from http://winrtstoragehelper.codeplex.com/ and my modified version that uses the AsyncLock from Stephen Toub.

May I also suggest this link: http://www.hanselman.com/blog/ComparingTwoTechniquesInNETAsynchronousCoordinationPrimitives.aspx

13

Stephen Taub has implemented a solution to this question, see Building Async Coordination Primitives, Part 7: AsyncReaderWriterLock.

Stephen Taub is highly regarded in the industry, so anything he writes is likely to be solid.

I won't reproduce the code that he posted on his blog, but I will show you how to use it:

/// <summary>
///     Demo class for reader/writer lock that supports async/await.
///     For source, see Stephen Taub's brilliant article, "Building Async Coordination
///     Primitives, Part 7: AsyncReaderWriterLock".
/// </summary>
public class AsyncReaderWriterLockDemo
{
    private readonly IAsyncReaderWriterLock _lock = new AsyncReaderWriterLock(); 

    public async void DemoCode()
    {           
        using(var releaser = await _lock.ReaderLockAsync()) 
        { 
            // Insert reads here.
            // Multiple readers can access the lock simultaneously.
        }

        using (var releaser = await _lock.WriterLockAsync())
        {
            // Insert writes here.
            // If a writer is in progress, then readers are blocked.
        }
    }
}

If you want a method that's baked into the .NET framework, use SemaphoreSlim.WaitAsync instead. You won't get a reader/writer lock, but you will get tried and tested implementation.

2
  • I'm curious to know if there are any caveats to using this code. If anyone can demonstrate any issues with this code, I'd like to know. However, what is true is that the concept of async/await locking is definitely well proven, as SemaphoreSlim.WaitAsync is in the .NET framework. All this code does is add a reader/writer lock concept.
    – Contango
    Commented Sep 12, 2014 at 8:40
  • 2
    A reader/writer concept is pretty useful, though. This sort of stuff should be baked into .NET. Isn't the whole reason for having a framework so that you can rely on it to provide you with useful stuff like these kinds of primitives?
    – Jez
    Commented Feb 28, 2023 at 10:12
1

Hmm, looks ugly, seems to work.

static class Async
{
    public static Task<IDisposable> Lock(object obj)
    {
        return TaskEx.Run(() =>
            {
                var resetEvent = ResetEventFor(obj);

                resetEvent.WaitOne();
                resetEvent.Reset();

                return new ExitDisposable(obj) as IDisposable;
            });
    }

    private static readonly IDictionary<object, WeakReference> ResetEventMap =
        new Dictionary<object, WeakReference>();

    private static ManualResetEvent ResetEventFor(object @lock)
    {
        if (!ResetEventMap.ContainsKey(@lock) ||
            !ResetEventMap[@lock].IsAlive)
        {
            ResetEventMap[@lock] =
                new WeakReference(new ManualResetEvent(true));
        }

        return ResetEventMap[@lock].Target as ManualResetEvent;
    }

    private static void CleanUp()
    {
        ResetEventMap.Where(kv => !kv.Value.IsAlive)
                     .ToList()
                     .ForEach(kv => ResetEventMap.Remove(kv));
    }

    private class ExitDisposable : IDisposable
    {
        private readonly object _lock;

        public ExitDisposable(object @lock)
        {
            _lock = @lock;
        }

        public void Dispose()
        {
            ResetEventFor(_lock).Set();
        }

        ~ExitDisposable()
        {
            CleanUp();
        }
    }
}
0
1

I created a MutexAsyncable class, inspired by Stephen Toub's AsyncLock implementation (discussion at this blog post), which can be used as a drop-in replacement for a lock statement in either sync or async code:

using System;
using System.Threading;
using System.Threading.Tasks;

namespace UtilsCommon.Lib;

/// <summary>
/// Class that provides (optionally async-safe) locking using an internal semaphore.
/// Use this in place of a lock() {...} construction.
/// Bear in mind that all code executed inside the worker must finish before the next
/// thread is able to start executing it, so long-running code should be avoided inside
/// the worker if at all possible.
///
/// Example usage for sync:
/// using (mutex.LockSync()) {
///     // ... code here which is synchronous and handles a shared resource ...
///     return[ result];
/// }
///
/// ... or for async:
/// using (await mutex.LockAsync()) {
///     // ... code here which can use await calls and handle a shared resource ...
///     return[ result];
/// }
/// </summary>
public sealed class MutexAsyncable {
    #region Internal classes

    private sealed class Releaser : IDisposable {
        private readonly MutexAsyncable _toRelease;
        internal Releaser(MutexAsyncable toRelease) { _toRelease = toRelease; }
        public void Dispose() { _toRelease._semaphore.Release(); }
    }

    #endregion

    private readonly SemaphoreSlim _semaphore = new(1, 1);
    private readonly Task<IDisposable> _releaser;

    public MutexAsyncable() {
        _releaser = Task.FromResult((IDisposable)new Releaser(this));
    }

    public IDisposable LockSync() {
        _semaphore.Wait();
        return _releaser.Result;
    }

    public Task<IDisposable> LockAsync() {
        var wait = _semaphore.WaitAsync();
        if (wait.IsCompleted) { return _releaser; }
        else {
            // Return Task<IDisposable> which completes once WaitAsync does
            return wait.ContinueWith(
                (_, state) => (IDisposable)state!,
                _releaser.Result,
                CancellationToken.None,
                TaskContinuationOptions.ExecuteSynchronously,
                TaskScheduler.Default
            );
        }
    }
}

It's safe to use the above if you're using .NET 5+ because that won't ever throw ThreadAbortException.

I also created an extended SemaphoreLocker class, inspired by this answer, which can be a general-purpose replacement for lock, usable either synchronously or asynchronously. It is less efficient than the above MutexAsyncable and allocates more resources, although it has the benefit of forcing the worker code to release the lock once it's finished (technically, the IDisposable returned by the MutexAsyncable could not get disposed by calling code and cause deadlock). It also has extra try/finally code to deal with the possibility of ThreadAbortException, so should be usable in earlier .NET versions:

using System;
using System.Threading;
using System.Threading.Tasks;

namespace UtilsCommon.Lib;

/// <summary>
/// Class that provides (optionally async-safe) locking using an internal semaphore.
/// Use this in place of a lock() {...} construction.
/// Bear in mind that all code executed inside the worker must finish before the next thread is able to
/// start executing it, so long-running code should be avoided inside the worker if at all possible.
///
/// Example usage:
/// [var result = ]await _locker.LockAsync(async () => {
///     // ... code here which can use await calls and handle a shared resource one-thread-at-a-time ...
///     return[ result];
/// });
///
/// ... or for sync:
/// [var result = ]_locker.LockSync(() => {
///     // ... code here which is synchronous and handles a shared resource one-thread-at-a-time ...
///     return[ result];
/// });
/// </summary>
public sealed class SemaphoreLocker : IDisposable {
    private readonly SemaphoreSlim _semaphore = new(1, 1);

    /// <summary>
    /// Runs the worker lambda in a locked context.
    /// </summary>
    /// <typeparam name="T">The type of the worker lambda's return value.</typeparam>
    /// <param name="worker">The worker lambda to be executed.</param>
    public T LockSync<T>(Func<T> worker) {
        var isTaken = false;
        try {
            do {
                try {
                }
                finally {
                    isTaken = _semaphore.Wait(TimeSpan.FromSeconds(1));
                }
            }
            while (!isTaken);
            return worker();
        }
        finally {
            if (isTaken) {
                _semaphore.Release();
            }
        }
    }

    /// <inheritdoc cref="LockSync{T}(Func{T})" />
    public void LockSync(Action worker) {
        var isTaken = false;
        try {
            do {
                try {
                }
                finally {
                    isTaken = _semaphore.Wait(TimeSpan.FromSeconds(1));
                }
            }
            while (!isTaken);
            worker();
        }
        finally {
            if (isTaken) {
                _semaphore.Release();
            }
        }
    }

    /// <summary>
    /// Runs the worker lambda in an async-safe locked context.
    /// </summary>
    /// <typeparam name="T">The type of the worker lambda's return value.</typeparam>
    /// <param name="worker">The worker lambda to be executed.</param>
    public async Task<T> LockAsync<T>(Func<Task<T>> worker) {
        var isTaken = false;
        try {
            do {
                try {
                }
                finally {
                    isTaken = await _semaphore.WaitAsync(TimeSpan.FromSeconds(1));
                }
            }
            while (!isTaken);
            return await worker();
        }
        finally {
            if (isTaken) {
                _semaphore.Release();
            }
        }
    }

    /// <inheritdoc cref="LockAsync{T}(Func{Task{T}})" />
    public async Task LockAsync(Func<Task> worker) {
        var isTaken = false;
        try {
            do {
                try {
                }
                finally {
                    isTaken = await _semaphore.WaitAsync(TimeSpan.FromSeconds(1));
                }
            }
            while (!isTaken);
            await worker();
        }
        finally {
            if (isTaken) {
                _semaphore.Release();
            }
        }
    }

    /// <summary>
    /// Releases all resources used by the current instance of the SemaphoreLocker class.
    /// </summary>
    public void Dispose() {
        _semaphore.Dispose();
    }
}
15
  • The code contains some long comments that cause the appearance of the horizontal scrollbar, making it hard to read the code. I would suggest shortening the comments by adding a few line-breaks. Commented Feb 26, 2023 at 14:16
  • I would suggest adding Configure.Await(false) in the await worker(). Also explaining the reason for the TimeSpan.FromSeconds(1) and the mysterious empty try/finally blocks would be nice. Some cautionary note about the performance implications of the TimeSpan.FromSeconds(1), for example in case there are thousands of execution flows suspended on an await LockAsync command, would be nice too. Commented Feb 26, 2023 at 14:20
  • Why would there be thousands of suspended execution flows? Sounds to me like your program would have bigger problems in that case.
    – Jez
    Commented Feb 26, 2023 at 16:01
  • Thousands might be an exaggeration. Several dozens is more plausible, for example for synchronizing the enumeration of the source in a Parallel.ForEachAsync implementation. The point is that you are offering the SemaphoreLocker as a general-purpose tool, without mentioning its unusual performance characteristics. People who think that they can use it as freely as a SemaphoreSlim, might get into trouble. Commented Feb 26, 2023 at 19:37
  • 1
    I've updated my answer, adding a hopefully more efficient MutexAsyncable class for .NET 5+.
    – Jez
    Commented Feb 27, 2023 at 13:13
-1

I did try using a Monitor (code below) which appears to work but has a GOTCHA... when you have multiple threads it will give...

System.Threading.SynchronizationLockException Object synchronization method was called from an unsynchronized block of code.

using System;
using System.Threading;
using System.Threading.Tasks;

namespace MyNamespace
{
    public class ThreadsafeFooModifier : 
    {
        private readonly object _lockObject;

        public async Task<FooResponse> ModifyFooAsync()
        {
            FooResponse result;
            Monitor.Enter(_lockObject);
            try
            {
                result = await SomeFunctionToModifyFooAsync();
            }
            finally
            {
                Monitor.Exit(_lockObject);
            }
            return result;
        }
    }
}

Prior to this I was simply doing this, but it was in an ASP.NET controller so it resulted in a deadlock.

public async Task<FooResponse> ModifyFooAsync()
{
    lock(lockObject)
    {
        return SomeFunctionToModifyFooAsync.Result;
    }
}
1
  • NOTE: I did add this answer to give an insight into what might look to work, but will bite you eventually.... rather than code you should copy and use! ... The SemaphoreSlim is what should be used, do not forget to dispose it properly though. Commented Dec 15, 2022 at 17:09
-1

I have my own class AsyncLock.
I made it IDisposable, so it can use a using-block.
(the unlock of the semaphore in the idispose ensures it will also be unlocked if there is an exception, without the need for try-finally)

namespace Test
{


    public abstract class AsyncLock
    : System.IAsyncDisposable
    {
        private readonly System.Threading.SemaphoreSlim m_semaphore;


        protected AsyncLock(System.Threading.SemaphoreSlim semaphore)
        {
            this.m_semaphore = semaphore;
        } // End Constructor 


        private class InternalAsyncSemaphoreSlimWrapper
            : AsyncLock
        {
            public InternalAsyncSemaphoreSlimWrapper(System.Threading.SemaphoreSlim semaphore)
               : base(semaphore)
            { } // End Constructor 

        } // End Class InternalAsyncSemaphoreSlimWrapper 


        private async System.Threading.Tasks.Task AcquireAsync()
        {
            await this.m_semaphore.WaitAsync();  // Asynchronously wait for the semaphore
        } // End Task AcquireAsync 


        public static async System.Threading.Tasks.Task<AsyncLock> LockAsync(System.Threading.SemaphoreSlim semaphore)
        {
            InternalAsyncSemaphoreSlimWrapper wrapper = new InternalAsyncSemaphoreSlimWrapper(semaphore);
            await wrapper.AcquireAsync();

            return wrapper;
        } // End Function LockAsync 


        async System.Threading.Tasks.ValueTask System.IAsyncDisposable.DisposeAsync()
        {
            this.m_semaphore.Release();  // Release the semaphore when disposed
            await System.Threading.Tasks.Task.CompletedTask;
        } // End Task DisposeAsync 


        internal static async System.Threading.Tasks.Task Test()
        {
            // private static readonly System.Threading.SemaphoreSlim s_consoleSemaphore = new System.Threading.SemaphoreSlim(1, 1);
            System.Threading.SemaphoreSlim s_consoleSemaphore = new System.Threading.SemaphoreSlim(1, 1);

            // because lock BLOCKS the thread when it waits 
            await using (AsyncLock consoleLocker = await AsyncLock.LockAsync(s_consoleSemaphore))
            {
                System.Console.WriteLine("inside the lock !");
            } // End Using consoleLocker 

        } // End Task Test 


    } // End Class AsyncLock 


} // End Namespace 

This can then be used as follows

private static readonly System.Threading.SemaphoreSlim s_consoleSemaphore = 
  new System.Threading.SemaphoreSlim(1, 1);

internal static async System.Threading.Tasks.Task TestAsync()
{
    // no lock possible because lock BLOCKS the thread when it waits 
    // semaphore does not 
    await using (AsyncLock consoleLocker = await AsyncLock.LockAsync(s_consoleSemaphore))
    {
        await System.Console.Out.WriteLineAsync("inside the lock !");
    } // End Using consoleLocker 

} // End Task TestAsync 

As you can see, new object() from lock is simply replaced with new SemaphoreSlim(1, 1)

The lock-statement for comparison:

private static readonly object s_consoleLock = new object();

internal static void Test()
{
    // no lock possible because lock BLOCKS the thread when it waits 
    // semaphore does not 
    lock(s_consoleLock)
    {
        System.Console.WriteLine("inside the lock !");
    } // End lock 

} // End Task Test 

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