I need to try to lock on an object, and if its already locked just continue (after time out, or without it).
The C# lock statement is blocking.
Ed's got the right function for you. Just don't forget to call Monitor.Exit()
. You should use a try-finally
block to guarantee proper cleanup.
if (Monitor.TryEnter(someObject))
{
try
{
// use object
}
finally
{
Monitor.Exit(someObject);
}
}
I believe that you can use Monitor.TryEnter()
.
The lock statement just translates to a Monitor.Enter()
call and a try catch
block.
I had the same problem, I ended up creating a class TryLock
that implements IDisposable and then uses the using
statement to control the scope of the lock:
public class TryLock : IDisposable
{
private object locked;
public bool HasLock { get; private set; }
public TryLock(object obj)
{
if (Monitor.TryEnter(obj))
{
HasLock = true;
locked = obj;
}
}
public void Dispose()
{
if (HasLock)
{
Monitor.Exit(locked);
locked = null;
HasLock = false;
}
}
}
And then use the following syntax to lock:
var obj = new object();
using (var tryLock = new TryLock(obj))
{
if (tryLock.HasLock)
{
Console.WriteLine("Lock acquired..");
}
}
obj
instance in the second code snippet above is just an example of how to use the TryLock class to lock on any object. Obviously there is no point locking on an object that isn't shared between threads in some way (i.e. a static instance or singleton) - so you're correct, we wouldn't typically initialise a local variable object instance and lock on it.
Consider using AutoResetEvent and its method WaitOne with a timeout input.
static AutoResetEvent autoEvent = new AutoResetEvent(true);
if(autoEvent.WaitOne(0))
{
//start critical section
Console.WriteLine("no other thread here, do your job");
Thread.Sleep(5000);
//end critical section
autoEvent.Set();
}
else
{
Console.WriteLine("A thread working already at this time.");
}
See https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/cc189907(v=vs.110).aspx https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/system.threading.autoresetevent(v=vs.110).aspx and https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/cc190477(v=vs.110).aspx
You'll probably find this out for yourself now that the others have pointed you in the right direction, but TryEnter can also take a timeout parameter.
Jeff Richter's "CLR Via C#" is an excellent book on details of CLR innards if you're getting into more complicated stuff.
Based on Dereks answer a little helper method:
private bool TryExecuteLocked(object lockObject, Action action)
{
if (!Monitor.TryEnter(lockObject))
return false;
try
{
action();
}
finally
{
Monitor.Exit(lockObject);
}
return true;
}
Usage:
private object _myLockObject;
private void Usage()
{
if (TryExecuteLocked(_myLockObject, ()=> DoCoolStuff()))
{
Console.WriteLine("Hurray!");
}
}