Lazy<T> Constructors
Definition
Important
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Initializes a new instance of the Lazy<T> class.
Overloads
Lazy<T>() |
Initializes a new instance of the Lazy<T> class. When lazy initialization occurs, the parameterless constructor of the target type is used. |
Lazy<T>(Boolean) |
Initializes a new instance of the Lazy<T> class. When lazy initialization occurs, the parameterless constructor of the target type and the specified initialization mode are used. |
Lazy<T>(Func<T>) |
Initializes a new instance of the Lazy<T> class. When lazy initialization occurs, the specified initialization function is used. |
Lazy<T>(LazyThreadSafetyMode) |
Initializes a new instance of the Lazy<T> class that uses the parameterless constructor of |
Lazy<T>(T) |
Initializes a new instance of the Lazy<T> class that uses a preinitialized specified value. |
Lazy<T>(Func<T>, Boolean) |
Initializes a new instance of the Lazy<T> class. When lazy initialization occurs, the specified initialization function and initialization mode are used. |
Lazy<T>(Func<T>, LazyThreadSafetyMode) |
Initializes a new instance of the Lazy<T> class that uses the specified initialization function and thread-safety mode. |
Lazy<T>()
- Source:
- Lazy.cs
- Source:
- Lazy.cs
- Source:
- Lazy.cs
Initializes a new instance of the Lazy<T> class. When lazy initialization occurs, the parameterless constructor of the target type is used.
public:
Lazy();
public Lazy ();
Public Sub New ()
Examples
The following example demonstrates the use of this constructor. It also illustrates the use of the Lazy<T>(Boolean) constructor (specifying true
for isThreadSafe
) and the Lazy<T>(LazyThreadSafetyMode) constructor (specifying LazyThreadSafetyMode.ExecutionAndPublication for mode
). To switch to a different constructor, just change which constructors are commented out.
The example defines a LargeObject
class that will be initialized lazily by one of several threads. The two key lines of code in this example are the creation of the initializer and the actual initialization. At the beginning of the Main
method, the example creates the thread-safe lazy initializer for LargeObject
:
lazyLargeObject = new Lazy<LargeObject>();
// The following lines show how to use other constructors to achieve exactly the
// same result as the previous line:
//lazyLargeObject = new Lazy<LargeObject>(true);
//lazyLargeObject = new Lazy<LargeObject>(LazyThreadSafetyMode.ExecutionAndPublication);
let lazyLargeObject = Lazy<LargeObject>()
// The following lines show how to use other constructors to achieve exactly the
// same result as the previous line:
// let lazyLargeObject = Lazy<LargeObject>(true)
// let lazyLargeObject = Lazy<LargeObject>(LazyThreadSafetyMode.ExecutionAndPublication)
lazyLargeObject = New Lazy(Of LargeObject)()
' The following lines show how to use other constructors to achieve exactly the
' same result as the previous line:
'lazyLargeObject = New Lazy(Of LargeObject)(True)
'lazyLargeObject = New Lazy(Of LargeObject)(LazyThreadSafetyMode.ExecutionAndPublication)
The example creates and starts three threads that block on a ManualResetEvent object, so that the example can release the threads all at once. The ThreadProc
method that's used by all three threads calls the Value property to get the LargeObject
instance:
LargeObject large = lazyLargeObject.Value;
let large = lazyLargeObject.Value
Dim large As LargeObject = lazyLargeObject.Value
The Lazy<T> class provides locking, so that only one thread is allowed to create the LargeObject
instance. The example demonstrates that the other threads all get the same instance.
Note
For simplicity, this example uses a global instance of Lazy<T>, and all the methods are static
(Shared
in Visual Basic). These are not requirements for the use of lazy initialization.
using System;
using System.Threading;
class Program
{
static Lazy<LargeObject> lazyLargeObject = null;
static void Main()
{
// The lazy initializer is created here. LargeObject is not created until the
// ThreadProc method executes.
lazyLargeObject = new Lazy<LargeObject>();
// The following lines show how to use other constructors to achieve exactly the
// same result as the previous line:
//lazyLargeObject = new Lazy<LargeObject>(true);
//lazyLargeObject = new Lazy<LargeObject>(LazyThreadSafetyMode.ExecutionAndPublication);
Console.WriteLine(
"\r\nLargeObject is not created until you access the Value property of the lazy" +
"\r\ninitializer. Press Enter to create LargeObject.");
Console.ReadLine();
// Create and start 3 threads, passing the same blocking event to all of them.
ManualResetEvent startingGate = new ManualResetEvent(false);
Thread[] threads = { new Thread(ThreadProc), new Thread(ThreadProc), new Thread(ThreadProc) };
foreach (Thread t in threads)
{
t.Start(startingGate);
}
// Give all 3 threads time to start and wait, then release them all at once.
Thread.Sleep(100);
startingGate.Set();
// Wait for all 3 threads to finish. (The order doesn't matter.)
foreach (Thread t in threads)
{
t.Join();
}
Console.WriteLine("\r\nPress Enter to end the program");
Console.ReadLine();
}
static void ThreadProc(object state)
{
// Wait for the signal.
ManualResetEvent waitForStart = (ManualResetEvent) state;
waitForStart.WaitOne();
LargeObject large = lazyLargeObject.Value;
// The following line introduces an artificial delay to exaggerate the race condition.
Thread.Sleep(5);
// IMPORTANT: Lazy initialization is thread-safe, but it doesn't protect the
// object after creation. You must lock the object before accessing it,
// unless the type is thread safe. (LargeObject is not thread safe.)
lock(large)
{
large.Data[0] = Thread.CurrentThread.ManagedThreadId;
Console.WriteLine("Initialized by thread {0}; last used by thread {1}.",
large.InitializedBy, large.Data[0]);
}
}
}
class LargeObject
{
int initBy = 0;
public int InitializedBy { get { return initBy; } }
public LargeObject()
{
initBy = Thread.CurrentThread.ManagedThreadId;
Console.WriteLine("LargeObject was created on thread id {0}.", initBy);
}
public long[] Data = new long[100000000];
}
/* This example produces output similar to the following:
LargeObject is not created until you access the Value property of the lazy
initializer. Press Enter to create LargeObject.
LargeObject was created on thread id 4.
Initialized by thread 4; last used by thread 3.
Initialized by thread 4; last used by thread 4.
Initialized by thread 4; last used by thread 5.
Press Enter to end the program
*/
open System
open System.Threading
type LargeObject() =
let initBy = Thread.CurrentThread.ManagedThreadId
do
printfn $"LargeObject was created on thread id {initBy}."
member val Data = Array.zeroCreate<int64> 100000000 with get
member _.InitializedBy = initBy
// The lazy initializer is created here. LargeObject is not created until the
// ThreadProc method executes.
let lazyLargeObject = Lazy<LargeObject>()
// The following lines show how to use other constructors to achieve exactly the
// same result as the previous line:
// let lazyLargeObject = Lazy<LargeObject>(true)
// let lazyLargeObject = Lazy<LargeObject>(LazyThreadSafetyMode.ExecutionAndPublication)
let threadProc (state: obj) =
// Wait for the signal.
let waitForStart = state :?> ManualResetEvent
waitForStart.WaitOne() |> ignore
let large = lazyLargeObject.Value
// The following line introduces an artificial delay to exaggerate the race condition.
Thread.Sleep 5
// IMPORTANT: Lazy initialization is thread-safe, but it doesn't protect the
// object after creation. You must lock the object before accessing it,
// unless the type is thread safe. (LargeObject is not thread safe.)
lock large (fun () ->
large.Data[0] <- Thread.CurrentThread.ManagedThreadId
printfn $"Initialized by thread {large.InitializedBy} last used by thread {large.Data[0]}." )
printfn """
LargeObject is not created until you access the Value property of the lazy
initializer. Press Enter to create LargeObject."""
stdin.ReadLine() |> ignore
// Create and start 3 threads, passing the same blocking event to all of them.
let startingGate = new ManualResetEvent false
let threads = [| Thread(ParameterizedThreadStart threadProc); Thread(ParameterizedThreadStart threadProc); Thread(ParameterizedThreadStart threadProc) |]
for t in threads do
t.Start startingGate
// Give all 3 threads time to start and wait, then release them all at once.
Thread.Sleep 100
startingGate.Set() |> ignore
// Wait for all 3 threads to finish. (The order doesn't matter.)
for t in threads do
t.Join()
printfn "\nPress Enter to end the program"
stdin.ReadLine() |> ignore
// This example produces output similar to the following:
// LargeObject is not created until you access the Value property of the lazy
// initializer. Press Enter to create LargeObject.
//
// LargeObject was created on thread id 4.
// Initialized by thread 4 last used by thread 3.
// Initialized by thread 4 last used by thread 4.
// Initialized by thread 4 last used by thread 5.
//
// Press Enter to end the program
Imports System.Threading
Class Program
Private Shared lazyLargeObject As Lazy(Of LargeObject) = Nothing
Shared Sub Main()
' The lazy initializer is created here. LargeObject is not created until the
' ThreadProc method executes.
lazyLargeObject = New Lazy(Of LargeObject)()
' The following lines show how to use other constructors to achieve exactly the
' same result as the previous line:
'lazyLargeObject = New Lazy(Of LargeObject)(True)
'lazyLargeObject = New Lazy(Of LargeObject)(LazyThreadSafetyMode.ExecutionAndPublication)
Console.WriteLine( _
vbCrLf & "LargeObject is not created until you access the Value property of the lazy" _
& vbCrLf & "initializer. Press Enter to create LargeObject.")
Console.ReadLine()
' Create and start 3 threads, passing the same blocking event to all of them.
Dim startingGate As New ManualResetEvent(False)
Dim threads() As Thread = { New Thread(AddressOf ThreadProc),
New Thread(AddressOf ThreadProc), New Thread(AddressOf ThreadProc) }
For Each t As Thread In threads
t.Start(startingGate)
Next t
' Give all 3 threads time to start and wait, then release them all at once.
Thread.Sleep(100)
startingGate.Set()
' Wait for all 3 threads to finish. (The order doesn't matter.)
For Each t As Thread In threads
t.Join()
Next t
Console.WriteLine(vbCrLf & "Press Enter to end the program")
Console.ReadLine()
End Sub
Private Shared Sub ThreadProc(ByVal state As Object)
' Wait for the signal.
Dim waitForStart As ManualResetEvent = CType(state, ManualResetEvent)
waitForStart.WaitOne()
Dim large As LargeObject = lazyLargeObject.Value
' The following line introduces an artificial delay to exaggerate the race condition.
Thread.Sleep(5)
' IMPORTANT: Lazy initialization is thread-safe, but it doesn't protect the
' object after creation. You must lock the object before accessing it,
' unless the type is thread safe. (LargeObject is not thread safe.)
SyncLock large
large.Data(0) = Thread.CurrentThread.ManagedThreadId
Console.WriteLine("Initialized by thread {0}; last used by thread {1}.", _
large.InitializedBy, large.Data(0))
End SyncLock
End Sub
End Class
Class LargeObject
Private initBy As Integer = 0
Public ReadOnly Property InitializedBy() As Integer
Get
Return initBy
End Get
End Property
Public Sub New()
initBy = Thread.CurrentThread.ManagedThreadId
Console.WriteLine("LargeObject was created on thread id {0}.", initBy)
End Sub
Public Data(100000000) As Long
End Class
' This example produces output similar to the following:
'
'LargeObject is not created until you access the Value property of the lazy
'initializer. Press Enter to create LargeObject.
'
'LargeObject was created on thread id 3.
'Initialized by thread 3; last used by thread 5.
'Initialized by thread 3; last used by thread 4.
'Initialized by thread 3; last used by thread 3.
'
'Press Enter to end the program
Remarks
An instance that is created with this constructor may be used concurrently from multiple threads.
The thread safety mode of a Lazy<T> instance that is initialized with this constructor is LazyThreadSafetyMode.ExecutionAndPublication. The thread safety mode describes the behavior when multiple threads try to initialize the Lazy<T> instance.
A Lazy<T> instance that is created with this constructor does not cache exceptions. For more information, see the Lazy<T> class or the System.Threading.LazyThreadSafetyMode enumeration.
See also
Applies to
Lazy<T>(Boolean)
- Source:
- Lazy.cs
- Source:
- Lazy.cs
- Source:
- Lazy.cs
Initializes a new instance of the Lazy<T> class. When lazy initialization occurs, the parameterless constructor of the target type and the specified initialization mode are used.
public:
Lazy(bool isThreadSafe);
public Lazy (bool isThreadSafe);
new Lazy<'T> : bool -> Lazy<'T>
Public Sub New (isThreadSafe As Boolean)
Parameters
- isThreadSafe
- Boolean
true
to make this instance usable concurrently by multiple threads; false
to make the instance usable by only one thread at a time.
Examples
The following example demonstrates the use of this constructor to create a lazy initializer that is not thread safe, for scenarios where all access to the lazily initialized object occurs on the same thread. It also demonstrates the use of the Lazy<T>(LazyThreadSafetyMode) constructor (specifying LazyThreadSafetyMode.None for mode
. To switch to a different constructor, just change which constructor is commented out.
Note
For code that demonstrates how to use this constructor in multithreaded scenarios (specifying true
for isThreadSafe
), see the example for the Lazy<T>() constructor.
The example defines a LargeObject
class that will be initialized lazily. In the Main
method, the example creates a Lazy<T> instance and then pauses. When you press the Enter key, the example accesses the Value property of the Lazy<T> instance, which causes initialization to occur. The constructor of the LargeObject
class displays a console message.
Note
For simplicity, this example uses a global instance of Lazy<T>, and all the methods are static
(Shared
in Visual Basic). These are not requirements for the use of lazy initialization.
using System;
using System.Threading;
class Program
{
static Lazy<LargeObject> lazyLargeObject = null;
static void Main()
{
// The lazy initializer is created here. LargeObject is not created until the
// ThreadProc method executes.
lazyLargeObject = new Lazy<LargeObject>(false);
// The following lines show how to use other constructors to achieve exactly the
// same result as the previous line:
//lazyLargeObject = new Lazy<LargeObject>(LazyThreadSafetyMode.None);
Console.WriteLine(
"\r\nLargeObject is not created until you access the Value property of the lazy" +
"\r\ninitializer. Press Enter to create LargeObject.");
Console.ReadLine();
LargeObject large = lazyLargeObject.Value;
large.Data[11] = 89;
Console.WriteLine("\r\nPress Enter to end the program");
Console.ReadLine();
}
}
class LargeObject
{
public LargeObject()
{
Console.WriteLine("LargeObject was created on thread id {0}.",
Thread.CurrentThread.ManagedThreadId);
}
public long[] Data = new long[100000000];
}
/* This example produces output similar to the following:
LargeObject is not created until you access the Value property of the lazy
initializer. Press Enter to create LargeObject.
LargeObject was created on thread id 1.
Press Enter to end the program
*/
open System
open System.Threading
type LargeObject () =
do
printfn $"LargeObject was created on thread id {Thread.CurrentThread.ManagedThreadId}."
member val Data = Array.zeroCreate<int64> 100000000 with get
// The lazy initializer is created here. LargeObject is not created until the
// ThreadProc method executes.
let lazyLargeObject = Lazy<LargeObject> false
// The following lines show how to use other constructors to achieve exactly the
// same result as the previous line:
// let lazyLargeObject = Lazy<LargeObject>(LazyThreadSafetyMode.None)
printfn """
LargeObject is not created until you access the Value property of the lazy
initializer. Press Enter to create LargeObject."""
stdin.ReadLine() |> ignore
let large = lazyLargeObject.Value
large.Data[11] <- 89
printfn "\nPress Enter to end the program"
stdin.ReadLine() |> ignore
// This example produces output similar to the following:
// LargeObject is not created until you access the Value property of the lazy
// initializer. Press Enter to create LargeObject.
//
// LargeObject was created on thread id 1.
//
// Press Enter to end the program
Imports System.Threading
Friend Class Program
Private Shared lazyLargeObject As Lazy(Of LargeObject) = Nothing
Shared Sub Main()
' The lazy initializer is created here. LargeObject is not created until the
' ThreadProc method executes.
lazyLargeObject = New Lazy(Of LargeObject)(False)
' The following lines show how to use other constructors to achieve exactly the
' same result as the previous line:
'lazyLargeObject = new Lazy<LargeObject>(LazyThreadSafetyMode.None);
Console.WriteLine( _
vbCrLf & "LargeObject is not created until you access the Value property of the lazy" _
& vbCrLf & "initializer. Press Enter to create LargeObject.")
Console.ReadLine()
Dim large As LargeObject = lazyLargeObject.Value
large.Data(11) = 89
Console.WriteLine(vbCrLf & "Press Enter to end the program")
Console.ReadLine()
End Sub
End Class
Friend Class LargeObject
Public Sub New()
Console.WriteLine("LargeObject was created on thread id {0}.", _
Thread.CurrentThread.ManagedThreadId)
End Sub
Public Data(100000000) As Long
End Class
' This example produces output similar to the following:
'
'LargeObject is not created until you access the Value property of the lazy
'initializer. Press Enter to create LargeObject.
'
'LargeObject was created on thread id 1.
'
'Press Enter to end the program
Remarks
The thread safety mode of a Lazy<T> instance that is initialized with this constructor is LazyThreadSafetyMode.ExecutionAndPublication if isThreadSafe
is true
; otherwise, the mode is LazyThreadSafetyMode.None. The thread safety mode describes the behavior when multiple threads try to initialize the Lazy<T> instance. To specify the LazyThreadSafetyMode.PublicationOnly mode, use the Lazy<T>(Func<T>, LazyThreadSafetyMode) or Lazy<T>(LazyThreadSafetyMode) constructor.
A Lazy<T> instance that is created with this constructor does not cache exceptions. For more information, see the Lazy<T> class or the System.Threading.LazyThreadSafetyMode enumeration.
See also
Applies to
Lazy<T>(Func<T>)
- Source:
- Lazy.cs
- Source:
- Lazy.cs
- Source:
- Lazy.cs
Initializes a new instance of the Lazy<T> class. When lazy initialization occurs, the specified initialization function is used.
public:
Lazy(Func<T> ^ valueFactory);
public Lazy (Func<T> valueFactory);
new Lazy<'T> : Func<'T> -> Lazy<'T>
Public Sub New (valueFactory As Func(Of T))
Parameters
- valueFactory
- Func<T>
The delegate that is invoked to produce the lazily initialized value when it is needed.
Exceptions
valueFactory
is null
.
Examples
The following example demonstrates the use of this constructor to provide lazy initialization with exception caching. It also demonstrates the use of the Lazy<T>(Func<T>, Boolean) constructor (specifying true
for isThreadSafe
) and the Lazy<T>(Func<T>, LazyThreadSafetyMode) constructor (specifying LazyThreadSafetyMode.ExecutionAndPublication for mode
). To switch to a different constructor, just change which constructors are commented out.
The example defines a LargeObject
class that will be initialized lazily by one of several threads. The three key sections of code illustrate the creation of the initializer, the actual initialization, and the constructor of the LargeObject
class, which demonstrates exception caching. At the beginning of the Main
method, the example creates the thread-safe lazy initializer for LargeObject
:
lazyLargeObject = new Lazy<LargeObject>(InitLargeObject);
// The following lines show how to use other constructors to achieve exactly the
// same result as the previous line:
//lazyLargeObject = new Lazy<LargeObject>(InitLargeObject, true);
//lazyLargeObject = new Lazy<LargeObject>(InitLargeObject, LazyThreadSafetyMode.ExecutionAndPublication);
let lazyLargeObject = Lazy<LargeObject> initLargeObject
// The following lines show how to use other constructors to achieve exactly the
// same result as the previous line:
// let lazyLargeObject = Lazy<LargeObject>(initLargeObject, true)
// let lazyLargeObject = Lazy<LargeObject>(initLargeObject, LazyThreadSafetyMode.ExecutionAndPublication)
lazyLargeObject = New Lazy(Of LargeObject)(AddressOf InitLargeObject)
' The following lines show how to use other constructors to achieve exactly the
' same result as the previous line:
'lazyLargeObject = New Lazy(Of LargeObject)(AddressOf InitLargeObject, True)
'lazyLargeObject = New Lazy(Of LargeObject)(AddressOf InitLargeObject, LazyThreadSafetyMode.ExecutionAndPublication)
The example creates and starts three threads. The ThreadProc
method that's used by all three threads calls the Value property to get the LargeObject
instance:
try
{
LargeObject large = lazyLargeObject.Value;
// IMPORTANT: Lazy initialization is thread-safe, but it doesn't protect the
// object after creation. You must lock the object before accessing it,
// unless the type is thread safe. (LargeObject is not thread safe.)
lock(large)
{
large.Data[0] = Thread.CurrentThread.ManagedThreadId;
Console.WriteLine("Initialized by thread {0}; last used by thread {1}.",
large.InitializedBy, large.Data[0]);
}
}
catch (ApplicationException aex)
{
Console.WriteLine("Exception: {0}", aex.Message);
}
try
let large = lazyLargeObject.Value
// IMPORTANT: Lazy initialization is thread-safe, but it doesn't protect the
// object after creation. You must lock the object before accessing it,
// unless the type is thread safe. (LargeObject is not thread safe.)
lock large (fun () ->
large.Data[0] <- Thread.CurrentThread.ManagedThreadId
printfn $"Initialized by thread {large.InitializedBy} last used by thread {large.Data[0]}.")
with :? ApplicationException as aex ->
printfn $"Exception: {aex.Message}"
Try
Dim large As LargeObject = lazyLargeObject.Value
' IMPORTANT: Lazy initialization is thread-safe, but it doesn't protect the
' object after creation. You must lock the object before accessing it,
' unless the type is thread safe. (LargeObject is not thread safe.)
SyncLock large
large.Data(0) = Thread.CurrentThread.ManagedThreadId
Console.WriteLine("Initialized by thread {0}; last used by thread {1}.", _
large.InitializedBy, large.Data(0))
End SyncLock
Catch aex As ApplicationException
Console.WriteLine("Exception: {0}", aex.Message)
End Try
In the constructor of the LargeObject
class, the third key section of code throws an exception the first time a LargeObject
instance is created, but thereafter allows instance creation to occur:
static int instanceCount = 0;
public LargeObject()
{
if (1 == Interlocked.Increment(ref instanceCount))
{
throw new ApplicationException("Throw only ONCE.");
}
initBy = Thread.CurrentThread.ManagedThreadId;
Console.WriteLine("LargeObject was created on thread id {0}.", initBy);
}
type LargeObject() =
static let mutable instanceCount = 0
let initBy = Thread.CurrentThread.ManagedThreadId
do
if 1 = Interlocked.Increment &instanceCount then
raise (ApplicationException "Throw only ONCE.")
printfn $"LargeObject was created on thread id {initBy}."
Private Shared instanceCount As Integer = 0
Public Sub New()
If 1 = Interlocked.Increment(instanceCount) Then
Throw New ApplicationException("Throw only ONCE.")
End If
initBy = Thread.CurrentThread.ManagedThreadId
Console.WriteLine("LargeObject was created on thread id {0}.", initBy)
End Sub
When the example is run, the first thread that tries to create an instance of LargeObject
fails, and the exception is caught. You might expect that the next thread would successfully create an instance, but the Lazy<T> object has cached the exception. Because of this, all three threads throw the exception.
Note
For simplicity, this example uses a global instance of Lazy<T>, and all the methods are static
(Shared
in Visual Basic). These are not requirements for the use of lazy initialization.
using System;
using System.Threading;
class Program
{
static Lazy<LargeObject> lazyLargeObject = null;
static LargeObject InitLargeObject()
{
return new LargeObject();
}
static void Main()
{
// The lazy initializer is created here. LargeObject is not created until the
// ThreadProc method executes.
lazyLargeObject = new Lazy<LargeObject>(InitLargeObject);
// The following lines show how to use other constructors to achieve exactly the
// same result as the previous line:
//lazyLargeObject = new Lazy<LargeObject>(InitLargeObject, true);
//lazyLargeObject = new Lazy<LargeObject>(InitLargeObject, LazyThreadSafetyMode.ExecutionAndPublication);
Console.WriteLine(
"\r\nLargeObject is not created until you access the Value property of the lazy" +
"\r\ninitializer. Press Enter to create LargeObject.");
Console.ReadLine();
// Create and start 3 threads, each of which tries to use LargeObject.
Thread[] threads = { new Thread(ThreadProc), new Thread(ThreadProc), new Thread(ThreadProc) };
foreach (Thread t in threads)
{
t.Start();
}
// Wait for all 3 threads to finish. (The order doesn't matter.)
foreach (Thread t in threads)
{
t.Join();
}
Console.WriteLine("\r\nPress Enter to end the program");
Console.ReadLine();
}
static void ThreadProc(object state)
{
try
{
LargeObject large = lazyLargeObject.Value;
// IMPORTANT: Lazy initialization is thread-safe, but it doesn't protect the
// object after creation. You must lock the object before accessing it,
// unless the type is thread safe. (LargeObject is not thread safe.)
lock(large)
{
large.Data[0] = Thread.CurrentThread.ManagedThreadId;
Console.WriteLine("Initialized by thread {0}; last used by thread {1}.",
large.InitializedBy, large.Data[0]);
}
}
catch (ApplicationException aex)
{
Console.WriteLine("Exception: {0}", aex.Message);
}
}
}
class LargeObject
{
int initBy = 0;
public int InitializedBy { get { return initBy; } }
static int instanceCount = 0;
public LargeObject()
{
if (1 == Interlocked.Increment(ref instanceCount))
{
throw new ApplicationException("Throw only ONCE.");
}
initBy = Thread.CurrentThread.ManagedThreadId;
Console.WriteLine("LargeObject was created on thread id {0}.", initBy);
}
public long[] Data = new long[100000000];
}
/* This example produces output similar to the following:
LargeObject is not created until you access the Value property of the lazy
initializer. Press Enter to create LargeObject.
Exception: Throw only ONCE.
Exception: Throw only ONCE.
Exception: Throw only ONCE.
Press Enter to end the program
*/
open System
open System.Threading
type LargeObject() =
static let mutable instanceCount = 0
let initBy = Thread.CurrentThread.ManagedThreadId
do
if 1 = Interlocked.Increment &instanceCount then
raise (ApplicationException "Throw only ONCE.")
printfn $"LargeObject was created on thread id {initBy}."
member _.InitializedBy = initBy
member val Data = Array.zeroCreate<int64> 100000000
let initLargeObject () =
LargeObject()
// The lazy initializer is created here. LargeObject is not created until the
// ThreadProc method executes.
let lazyLargeObject = Lazy<LargeObject> initLargeObject
// The following lines show how to use other constructors to achieve exactly the
// same result as the previous line:
// let lazyLargeObject = Lazy<LargeObject>(initLargeObject, true)
// let lazyLargeObject = Lazy<LargeObject>(initLargeObject, LazyThreadSafetyMode.ExecutionAndPublication)
let threadProc _ =
try
let large = lazyLargeObject.Value
// IMPORTANT: Lazy initialization is thread-safe, but it doesn't protect the
// object after creation. You must lock the object before accessing it,
// unless the type is thread safe. (LargeObject is not thread safe.)
lock large (fun () ->
large.Data[0] <- Thread.CurrentThread.ManagedThreadId
printfn $"Initialized by thread {large.InitializedBy} last used by thread {large.Data[0]}.")
with :? ApplicationException as aex ->
printfn $"Exception: {aex.Message}"
printfn """
LargeObject is not created until you access the Value property of the lazy
initializer. Press Enter to create LargeObject."""
stdin.ReadLine () |> ignore
// Create and start 3 threads, each of which tries to use LargeObject.
let threads =
[| Thread(ParameterizedThreadStart threadProc); Thread(ParameterizedThreadStart threadProc); Thread(ParameterizedThreadStart threadProc) |]
for t in threads do
t.Start()
// Wait for all 3 threads to finish. (The order doesn't matter.)
for t in threads do
t.Join()
printfn "\nPress Enter to end the program"
stdin.ReadLine() |> ignore
// This example produces output similar to the following:
// LargeObject is not created until you access the Value property of the lazy
// initializer. Press Enter to create LargeObject.
//
// Exception: Throw only ONCE.
// Exception: Throw only ONCE.
// Exception: Throw only ONCE.
//
// Press Enter to end the program
Imports System.Threading
Friend Class Program
Private Shared lazyLargeObject As Lazy(Of LargeObject) = Nothing
Private Shared Function InitLargeObject() As LargeObject
Return New LargeObject()
End Function
Shared Sub Main()
' The lazy initializer is created here. LargeObject is not created until the
' ThreadProc method executes.
lazyLargeObject = New Lazy(Of LargeObject)(AddressOf InitLargeObject)
' The following lines show how to use other constructors to achieve exactly the
' same result as the previous line:
'lazyLargeObject = New Lazy(Of LargeObject)(AddressOf InitLargeObject, True)
'lazyLargeObject = New Lazy(Of LargeObject)(AddressOf InitLargeObject, LazyThreadSafetyMode.ExecutionAndPublication)
Console.WriteLine(vbCrLf _
& "LargeObject is not created until you access the Value property of the lazy" _
& vbCrLf & "initializer. Press Enter to create LargeObject.")
Console.ReadLine()
' Create and start 3 threads, each of which tries to use LargeObject.
Dim threads() As Thread = { New Thread(AddressOf ThreadProc), _
New Thread(AddressOf ThreadProc), New Thread(AddressOf ThreadProc) }
For Each t As Thread In threads
t.Start()
Next t
' Wait for all 3 threads to finish. (The order doesn't matter.)
For Each t As Thread In threads
t.Join()
Next t
Console.WriteLine(vbCrLf & "Press Enter to end the program")
Console.ReadLine()
End Sub
Private Shared Sub ThreadProc(ByVal state As Object)
Try
Dim large As LargeObject = lazyLargeObject.Value
' IMPORTANT: Lazy initialization is thread-safe, but it doesn't protect the
' object after creation. You must lock the object before accessing it,
' unless the type is thread safe. (LargeObject is not thread safe.)
SyncLock large
large.Data(0) = Thread.CurrentThread.ManagedThreadId
Console.WriteLine("Initialized by thread {0}; last used by thread {1}.", _
large.InitializedBy, large.Data(0))
End SyncLock
Catch aex As ApplicationException
Console.WriteLine("Exception: {0}", aex.Message)
End Try
End Sub
End Class
Friend Class LargeObject
Private initBy As Integer = 0
Public ReadOnly Property InitializedBy() As Integer
Get
Return initBy
End Get
End Property
Private Shared instanceCount As Integer = 0
Public Sub New()
If 1 = Interlocked.Increment(instanceCount) Then
Throw New ApplicationException("Throw only ONCE.")
End If
initBy = Thread.CurrentThread.ManagedThreadId
Console.WriteLine("LargeObject was created on thread id {0}.", initBy)
End Sub
Public Data(99999999) As Long
End Class
' This example produces output similar to the following:
'
'LargeObject is not created until you access the Value property of the lazy
'initializer. Press Enter to create LargeObject.
'
'Exception: Throw only ONCE.
'Exception: Throw only ONCE.
'Exception: Throw only ONCE.
'
'Press Enter to end the program
'
Remarks
An instance that is created with this constructor may be used concurrently from multiple threads.
The thread safety mode of a Lazy<T> instance that is initialized with this constructor is LazyThreadSafetyMode.ExecutionAndPublication. The thread safety mode describes the behavior when multiple threads try to initialize the Lazy<T> instance.
Exceptions that are thrown by valueFactory
are cached. For more information, see the Lazy<T> class or the System.Threading.LazyThreadSafetyMode enumeration.
See also
Applies to
Lazy<T>(LazyThreadSafetyMode)
- Source:
- Lazy.cs
- Source:
- Lazy.cs
- Source:
- Lazy.cs
Initializes a new instance of the Lazy<T> class that uses the parameterless constructor of T
and the specified thread-safety mode.
public:
Lazy(System::Threading::LazyThreadSafetyMode mode);
public Lazy (System.Threading.LazyThreadSafetyMode mode);
new Lazy<'T> : System.Threading.LazyThreadSafetyMode -> Lazy<'T>
Public Sub New (mode As LazyThreadSafetyMode)
Parameters
- mode
- LazyThreadSafetyMode
One of the enumeration values that specifies the thread safety mode.
Exceptions
mode
contains an invalid value.
Examples
The following example demonstrates the use of this constructor to create a lazy initializer that enables multiple threads to race to create an object lazily. Multiple threads might succeed in creating instances, but all threads use the instance that was created first.
Note
For an example that demonstrates how to use this constructor in single-threaded scenarios (specifying LazyThreadSafetyMode.None for mode
), see the Lazy<T>(Boolean) constructor. For an example that demonstrates how to use this constructor to provide locking instead of race conditions in multithreaded scenarios (specifying LazyThreadSafetyMode.ExecutionAndPublication for mode
), see the Lazy<T>() constructor.
The example defines a LargeObject
class that will be initialized lazily by any of several threads. The three key sections of code illustrate the creation of the initializer, the actual initialization, and the constructor and finalizer of the LargeObject
class. At the beginning of the Main
method, the example creates the Lazy<T> object that performs lazy initialization of the LargeObject
:
lazyLargeObject = new Lazy<LargeObject>(LazyThreadSafetyMode.PublicationOnly);
let lazyLargeObject = Lazy<LargeObject> LazyThreadSafetyMode.PublicationOnly
lazyLargeObject = New Lazy(Of LargeObject)(LazyThreadSafetyMode.PublicationOnly)
The example creates and starts three threads that block on a ManualResetEvent object, so that the example can release the threads all at once. In the ThreadProc
method that's used by all three threads, calling the Value property creates the LargeObject
instance:
LargeObject large = lazyLargeObject.Value;
let large = lazyLargeObject.Value
Dim large As LargeObject = lazyLargeObject.Value
Because the constructor for the Lazy<T> instance specified LazyThreadSafetyMode.PublicationOnly, all three threads are allowed to create LargeObject
instances. The example demonstrates this by displaying console messages in the constructor and in the finalizer of the LargeObject
class:
public LargeObject()
{
initBy = Thread.CurrentThread.ManagedThreadId;
Console.WriteLine("Constructor: Instance initializing on thread {0}", initBy);
}
~LargeObject()
{
Console.WriteLine("Finalizer: Instance was initialized on {0}", initBy);
}
type LargeObject() =
let initBy = Thread.CurrentThread.ManagedThreadId
do
printfn $"Constructor: Instance initializing on thread {initBy}"
override _.Finalize() =
printfn $"Finalizer: Instance was initialized on {initBy}"
Public Sub New()
initBy = Thread.CurrentThread.ManagedThreadId
Console.WriteLine("Constructor: Instance initializing on thread {0}", initBy)
End Sub
Protected Overrides Sub Finalize()
Console.WriteLine("Finalizer: Instance was initialized on {0}", initBy)
End Sub
However, the Lazy<T> object ensures that only one instance is used by all threads. The output from the example shows that all three threads use the same instance, and also shows that the other two instances can be reclaimed by garbage collection.
Note
For simplicity, this example uses a global instance of Lazy<T>, and all the methods are static
(Shared
in Visual Basic). These are not requirements for the use of lazy initialization.
using System;
using System.Threading;
class Program
{
static Lazy<LargeObject> lazyLargeObject = null;
static void Main()
{
// The lazy initializer is created here. LargeObject is not created until the
// ThreadProc method executes.
lazyLargeObject = new Lazy<LargeObject>(LazyThreadSafetyMode.PublicationOnly);
// Create and start 3 threads, passing the same blocking event to all of them.
ManualResetEvent startingGate = new ManualResetEvent(false);
Thread[] threads = { new Thread(ThreadProc), new Thread(ThreadProc), new Thread(ThreadProc) };
foreach (Thread t in threads)
{
t.Start(startingGate);
}
// Give all 3 threads time to start and wait, then release them all at once.
Thread.Sleep(50);
startingGate.Set();
// Wait for all 3 threads to finish. (The order doesn't matter.)
foreach (Thread t in threads)
{
t.Join();
}
Console.WriteLine(
"\r\nThreads are complete. Running GC.Collect() to reclaim the extra instances.");
GC.Collect();
// Allow time for garbage collection, which happens asynchronously.
Thread.Sleep(100);
Console.WriteLine(
"\r\nNote that all three threads used the instance that was not collected.");
Console.WriteLine("Press Enter to end the program");
Console.ReadLine();
}
static void ThreadProc(object state)
{
// Wait for the signal.
ManualResetEvent waitForStart = (ManualResetEvent) state;
waitForStart.WaitOne();
LargeObject large = lazyLargeObject.Value;
// The following line introduces an artificial delay, to exaggerate the race
// condition.
Thread.Sleep(5);
// IMPORTANT: Lazy initialization is thread-safe, but it doesn't protect the
// object after creation. You must lock the object before accessing it,
// unless the type is thread safe. (LargeObject is not thread safe.)
lock(large)
{
large.Data[0] = Thread.CurrentThread.ManagedThreadId;
Console.WriteLine("LargeObject was initialized by thread {0}; last used by thread {1}.",
large.InitializedBy, large.Data[0]);
}
}
}
class LargeObject
{
int initBy = -1;
public int InitializedBy { get { return initBy; } }
public LargeObject()
{
initBy = Thread.CurrentThread.ManagedThreadId;
Console.WriteLine("Constructor: Instance initializing on thread {0}", initBy);
}
~LargeObject()
{
Console.WriteLine("Finalizer: Instance was initialized on {0}", initBy);
}
public long[] Data = new long[100000000];
}
/* This example produces output similar to the following:
Constructor: Instance initializing on thread 4
Constructor: Instance initializing on thread 3
Constructor: Instance initializing on thread 5
LargeObject was initialized by thread 4; last used by thread 4.
LargeObject was initialized by thread 4; last used by thread 5.
LargeObject was initialized by thread 4; last used by thread 3.
Threads are complete. Running GC.Collect() to reclaim the extra instances.
Finalizer: Instance was initialized on 3
Finalizer: Instance was initialized on 5
Note that all three threads used the instance that was not collected.
Press Enter to end the program
Instance finalizing; initialized on 4
*/
open System
open System.Threading
type LargeObject() =
let initBy = Thread.CurrentThread.ManagedThreadId
do
printfn $"Constructor: Instance initializing on thread {initBy}"
override _.Finalize() =
printfn $"Finalizer: Instance was initialized on {initBy}"
member _.InitializedBy = initBy
member val Data = Array.zeroCreate<int64> 100000000
// The lazy initializer is created here. LargeObject is not created until the
// ThreadProc method executes.
let lazyLargeObject = Lazy<LargeObject> LazyThreadSafetyMode.PublicationOnly
let threadProc (state: obj) =
// Wait for the signal.
let waitForStart = state :?> ManualResetEvent
waitForStart.WaitOne() |> ignore
let large = lazyLargeObject.Value
// The following line introduces an artificial delay, to exaggerate the race
// condition.
Thread.Sleep 5
// IMPORTANT: Lazy initialization is thread-safe, but it doesn't protect the
// object after creation. You must lock the object before accessing it,
// unless the type is thread safe. (LargeObject is not thread safe.)
lock large (fun () ->
large.Data[0] <- Thread.CurrentThread.ManagedThreadId
printfn $"LargeObject was initialized by thread {large.InitializedBy} last used by thread {large.Data[0]}.")
// Create and start 3 threads, passing the same blocking event to all of them.
let startingGate = new ManualResetEvent false
let threads =
[| Thread(ParameterizedThreadStart threadProc); Thread(ParameterizedThreadStart threadProc); Thread(ParameterizedThreadStart threadProc) |]
for t in threads do
t.Start startingGate
// Give all 3 threads time to start and wait, then release them all at once.
Thread.Sleep 50
startingGate.Set() |> ignore
// Wait for all 3 threads to finish. (The order doesn't matter.)
for t in threads do
t.Join()
printfn "\nThreads are complete. Running GC.Collect() to reclaim the extra instances."
GC.Collect()
// Allow time for garbage collection, which happens asynchronously.
Thread.Sleep 100
printfn "\nNote that all three threads used the instance that was not collected."
printfn "Press Enter to end the program"
stdin.ReadLine() |> ignore
// This example produces output similar to the following:
// Constructor: Instance initializing on thread 4
// Constructor: Instance initializing on thread 3
// Constructor: Instance initializing on thread 5
// LargeObject was initialized by thread 4 last used by thread 4.
// LargeObject was initialized by thread 4 last used by thread 5.
// LargeObject was initialized by thread 4 last used by thread 3.
//
// Threads are complete. Running GC.Collect() to reclaim the extra instances.
// Finalizer: Instance was initialized on 3
// Finalizer: Instance was initialized on 5
//
// Note that all three threads used the instance that was not collected.
// Press Enter to end the program
//
// Instance finalizing initialized on 4
Imports System.Threading
Friend Class Program
Private Shared lazyLargeObject As Lazy(Of LargeObject) = Nothing
Shared Sub Main()
' The lazy initializer is created here. LargeObject is not created until the
' ThreadProc method executes.
lazyLargeObject = New Lazy(Of LargeObject)(LazyThreadSafetyMode.PublicationOnly)
' Create and start 3 threads, passing the same blocking event to all of them.
Dim startingGate As New ManualResetEvent(False)
Dim threads() As Thread = { _
New Thread(AddressOf ThreadProc), _
New Thread(AddressOf ThreadProc), _
New Thread(AddressOf ThreadProc) _
}
For Each t As Thread In threads
t.Start(startingGate)
Next t
' Give all 3 threads time to start and wait, then release them all at once.
Thread.Sleep(50)
startingGate.Set()
' Wait for all 3 threads to finish. (The order doesn't matter.)
For Each t As Thread In threads
t.Join()
Next t
Console.WriteLine(vbCrLf & _
"Threads are complete. Running GC.Collect() to reclaim the extra instances.")
GC.Collect()
' Allow time for garbage collection, which happens asynchronously.
Thread.Sleep(100)
Console.WriteLine(vbCrLf & _
"Note that all three threads used the instance that was not collected.")
Console.WriteLine("Press Enter to end the program")
Console.ReadLine()
End Sub
Private Shared Sub ThreadProc(ByVal state As Object)
' Wait for the signal.
Dim waitForStart As ManualResetEvent = CType(state, ManualResetEvent)
waitForStart.WaitOne()
Dim large As LargeObject = lazyLargeObject.Value
' The following line introduces an artificial delay to exaggerate the race condition.
Thread.Sleep(5)
' IMPORTANT: Lazy initialization is thread-safe, but it doesn't protect the
' object after creation. You must lock the object before accessing it,
' unless the type is thread safe. (LargeObject is not thread safe.)
SyncLock large
large.Data(0) = Thread.CurrentThread.ManagedThreadId
Console.WriteLine( _
"LargeObject was initialized by thread {0}; last used by thread {1}.", _
large.InitializedBy, large.Data(0))
End SyncLock
End Sub
End Class
Friend Class LargeObject
Private initBy As Integer = -1
Public ReadOnly Property InitializedBy() As Integer
Get
Return initBy
End Get
End Property
Public Sub New()
initBy = Thread.CurrentThread.ManagedThreadId
Console.WriteLine("Constructor: Instance initializing on thread {0}", initBy)
End Sub
Protected Overrides Sub Finalize()
Console.WriteLine("Finalizer: Instance was initialized on {0}", initBy)
End Sub
Public Data(100000000) As Long
End Class
' This example produces output similar to the following:
'
'Constructor: Instance initializing on thread 3
'Constructor: Instance initializing on thread 5
'Constructor: Instance initializing on thread 4
'LargeObject was initialized by thread 3; last used by thread 4.
'LargeObject was initialized by thread 3; last used by thread 3.
'LargeObject was initialized by thread 3; last used by thread 5.
'
'Threads are complete. Running GC.Collect() to reclaim the extra instances.
'Finalizer: Instance was initialized on 5
'Finalizer: Instance was initialized on 4
'
'Note that all three threads used the instance that was not collected.
'Press Enter to end the program
'
'Finalizer: Instance was initialized on 3
'
Remarks
The thread safety mode of a Lazy<T> instance describes the behavior when multiple threads try to initialize the Lazy<T> instance.
A Lazy<T> instance that is created with this constructor does not cache exceptions. For more information, see the Lazy<T> class or the System.Threading.LazyThreadSafetyMode enumeration.
See also
Applies to
Lazy<T>(T)
- Source:
- Lazy.cs
- Source:
- Lazy.cs
- Source:
- Lazy.cs
Initializes a new instance of the Lazy<T> class that uses a preinitialized specified value.
public:
Lazy(T value);
public Lazy (T value);
new Lazy<'T> : 'T -> Lazy<'T>
Public Sub New (value As T)
Parameters
- value
- T
The preinitialized value to be used.
Remarks
An instance created with this constructor is usable by multiple threads concurrently.
Applies to
Lazy<T>(Func<T>, Boolean)
- Source:
- Lazy.cs
- Source:
- Lazy.cs
- Source:
- Lazy.cs
Initializes a new instance of the Lazy<T> class. When lazy initialization occurs, the specified initialization function and initialization mode are used.
public:
Lazy(Func<T> ^ valueFactory, bool isThreadSafe);
public Lazy (Func<T> valueFactory, bool isThreadSafe);
new Lazy<'T> : Func<'T> * bool -> Lazy<'T>
Public Sub New (valueFactory As Func(Of T), isThreadSafe As Boolean)
Parameters
- valueFactory
- Func<T>
The delegate that is invoked to produce the lazily initialized value when it is needed.
- isThreadSafe
- Boolean
true
to make this instance usable concurrently by multiple threads; false
to make this instance usable by only one thread at a time.
Exceptions
valueFactory
is null
.
Examples
The following example demonstrates the use of this constructor to provide lazy initialization with exception caching, in a scenario with a single thread. It also demonstrates the use of the Lazy<T> constructor (specifying LazyThreadSafetyMode.None for mode
). To switch to that constructor, just change which constructor is commented out.
Note
For code that demonstrates how to use this constructor in multithreaded scenarios (specifying true
for isThreadSafe
), see the example for the Lazy<T>(Func<T>) constructor.
The example defines a LargeObject
class that will be initialized lazily by one of several threads. The three key sections of code illustrate the creation of the initializer, the actual initialization, and the constructor of the LargeObject
class, which demonstrates exception caching. At the beginning of the Main
method, the example creates the thread-safe lazy initializer for LargeObject
:
lazyLargeObject = new Lazy<LargeObject>(InitLargeObject, false);
// The following lines show how to use other constructors to achieve exactly the
// same result as the previous line:
//lazyLargeObject = new Lazy<LargeObject>(InitLargeObject, LazyThreadSafetyMode.None);
let lazyLargeObject = Lazy<LargeObject>(initLargeObject, false)
// The following lines show how to use other constructors to achieve exactly the
// same result as the previous line:
// let lazyLargeObject = Lazy<LargeObject>(initLargeObject, LazyThreadSafetyMode.None)
lazyLargeObject = New Lazy(Of LargeObject)(AddressOf InitLargeObject, False)
' The following lines show how to use other constructors to achieve exactly the
' same result as the previous line:
'lazyLargeObject = New Lazy(Of LargeObject)(AddressOf InitLargeObject, LazyThreadSafetyMode.None)
In the call to the constructor, the isThreadSafe
parameter is false
, so the Lazy<T> is not thread safe. Because it's not thread safe, the example calls the Value property three times on the same thread:
for (int i = 0; i < 3; i++)
{
try
{
LargeObject large = lazyLargeObject.Value;
large.Data[11] = 89;
}
catch (ApplicationException aex)
{
Console.WriteLine("Exception: {0}", aex.Message);
}
}
for _ = 0 to 2 do
try
let large = lazyLargeObject.Value
large.Data[11] <- 89
with :? ApplicationException as aex ->
printfn $"Exception: {aex.Message}"
For i As Integer = 0 To 2
Try
Dim large As LargeObject = lazyLargeObject.Value
large.Data(11) = 89
Catch aex As ApplicationException
Console.WriteLine("Exception: {0}", aex.Message)
End Try
Next i
In the constructor of the LargeObject
class, the third key section of code throws an exception the first time a LargeObject
instance is created, but thereafter allows instance creation to occur:
static bool pleaseThrow = true;
public LargeObject()
{
if (pleaseThrow)
{
pleaseThrow = false;
throw new ApplicationException("Throw only ONCE.");
}
Console.WriteLine("LargeObject was created on thread id {0}.",
Thread.CurrentThread.ManagedThreadId);
}
type LargeObject() =
static let mutable pleaseThrow = true
do
if pleaseThrow then
pleaseThrow <- false
raise (ApplicationException "Throw only ONCE.")
printfn $"LargeObject was created on thread id {Thread.CurrentThread.ManagedThreadId}."
Private Shared pleaseThrow As Boolean = True
Public Sub New()
If pleaseThrow Then
pleaseThrow = False
Throw New ApplicationException("Throw only ONCE.")
End If
Console.WriteLine("LargeObject was created on thread id {0}.", _
Thread.CurrentThread.ManagedThreadId)
End Sub
When the example is run, the first attempt to create an instance of LargeObject
fails, and the exception is caught. You might expect that the next attempt would succeed, but the Lazy<T> object has cached the exception. Because of this, all three attempts throw the exception.
Note
For simplicity, this example uses a global instance of Lazy<T>, and all the methods are static
(Shared
in Visual Basic). These are not requirements for the use of lazy initialization.
using System;
using System.Threading;
class Program
{
static Lazy<LargeObject> lazyLargeObject = null;
static LargeObject InitLargeObject()
{
return new LargeObject();
}
static void Main()
{
// The lazy initializer is created here. LargeObject is not created until the
// ThreadProc method executes.
lazyLargeObject = new Lazy<LargeObject>(InitLargeObject, false);
// The following lines show how to use other constructors to achieve exactly the
// same result as the previous line:
//lazyLargeObject = new Lazy<LargeObject>(InitLargeObject, LazyThreadSafetyMode.None);
Console.WriteLine(
"\r\nLargeObject is not created until you access the Value property of the lazy" +
"\r\ninitializer. Press Enter to create LargeObject (three tries).");
Console.ReadLine();
for (int i = 0; i < 3; i++)
{
try
{
LargeObject large = lazyLargeObject.Value;
large.Data[11] = 89;
}
catch (ApplicationException aex)
{
Console.WriteLine("Exception: {0}", aex.Message);
}
}
Console.WriteLine("\r\nPress Enter to end the program");
Console.ReadLine();
}
}
class LargeObject
{
static bool pleaseThrow = true;
public LargeObject()
{
if (pleaseThrow)
{
pleaseThrow = false;
throw new ApplicationException("Throw only ONCE.");
}
Console.WriteLine("LargeObject was created on thread id {0}.",
Thread.CurrentThread.ManagedThreadId);
}
public long[] Data = new long[100000000];
}
/* This example produces output similar to the following:
LargeObject is not created until you access the Value property of the lazy
initializer. Press Enter to create LargeObject (three tries).
Exception: Throw only ONCE.
Exception: Throw only ONCE.
Exception: Throw only ONCE.
Press Enter to end the program
*/
open System
open System.Threading
type LargeObject() =
static let mutable pleaseThrow = true
do
if pleaseThrow then
pleaseThrow <- false
raise (ApplicationException "Throw only ONCE.")
printfn $"LargeObject was created on thread id {Thread.CurrentThread.ManagedThreadId}."
member val Data = Array.zeroCreate<int64> 100000000
let initLargeObject () =
LargeObject()
// The lazy initializer is created here. LargeObject is not created until the
// ThreadProc method executes.
let lazyLargeObject = Lazy<LargeObject>(initLargeObject, false)
// The following lines show how to use other constructors to achieve exactly the
// same result as the previous line:
// let lazyLargeObject = Lazy<LargeObject>(initLargeObject, LazyThreadSafetyMode.None)
printfn """
LargeObject is not created until you access the Value property of the lazy
initializer. Press Enter to create LargeObject (three tries)."""
stdin.ReadLine() |> ignore
for _ = 0 to 2 do
try
let large = lazyLargeObject.Value
large.Data[11] <- 89
with :? ApplicationException as aex ->
printfn $"Exception: {aex.Message}"
printfn "\nPress Enter to end the program"
stdin.ReadLine() |> ignore
// This example produces output similar to the following:
// LargeObject is not created until you access the Value property of the lazy
// initializer. Press Enter to create LargeObject (three tries).
//
// Exception: Throw only ONCE.
// Exception: Throw only ONCE.
// Exception: Throw only ONCE.
//
// Press Enter to end the program
Imports System.Threading
Friend Class Program
Private Shared lazyLargeObject As Lazy(Of LargeObject) = Nothing
Private Shared Function InitLargeObject() As LargeObject
Return New LargeObject()
End Function
Shared Sub Main()
' The lazy initializer is created here. LargeObject is not created until the
' ThreadProc method executes.
lazyLargeObject = New Lazy(Of LargeObject)(AddressOf InitLargeObject, False)
' The following lines show how to use other constructors to achieve exactly the
' same result as the previous line:
'lazyLargeObject = New Lazy(Of LargeObject)(AddressOf InitLargeObject, LazyThreadSafetyMode.None)
Console.WriteLine(vbCrLf _
& "LargeObject is not created until you access the Value property of the lazy" _
& vbCrLf & "initializer. Press Enter to create LargeObject (three tries).")
Console.ReadLine()
For i As Integer = 0 To 2
Try
Dim large As LargeObject = lazyLargeObject.Value
large.Data(11) = 89
Catch aex As ApplicationException
Console.WriteLine("Exception: {0}", aex.Message)
End Try
Next i
Console.WriteLine(vbCrLf & "Press Enter to end the program")
Console.ReadLine()
End Sub
End Class
Friend Class LargeObject
Private Shared pleaseThrow As Boolean = True
Public Sub New()
If pleaseThrow Then
pleaseThrow = False
Throw New ApplicationException("Throw only ONCE.")
End If
Console.WriteLine("LargeObject was created on thread id {0}.", _
Thread.CurrentThread.ManagedThreadId)
End Sub
Public Data(100000000) As Long
End Class
' This example produces output similar to the following:
'
'LargeObject is not created until you access the Value property of the lazy
'initializer. Press Enter to create LargeObject (three tries).
'
'Exception: Throw only ONCE.
'Exception: Throw only ONCE.
'Exception: Throw only ONCE.
'
'Press Enter to end the program
'
Remarks
The thread safety mode of a Lazy<T> instance that is initialized with this constructor is LazyThreadSafetyMode.ExecutionAndPublication if isThreadSafe
is true
; otherwise, the mode is LazyThreadSafetyMode.None. The thread safety mode describes the behavior when multiple threads try to initialize the Lazy<T> instance.
To specify the LazyThreadSafetyMode.PublicationOnly mode, use the Lazy<T>(Func<T>, LazyThreadSafetyMode) or Lazy<T>(LazyThreadSafetyMode) constructor.
Exceptions that are thrown by valueFactory
are cached. For more information, see the Lazy<T> class or the System.Threading.LazyThreadSafetyMode enumeration.
See also
Applies to
Lazy<T>(Func<T>, LazyThreadSafetyMode)
- Source:
- Lazy.cs
- Source:
- Lazy.cs
- Source:
- Lazy.cs
Initializes a new instance of the Lazy<T> class that uses the specified initialization function and thread-safety mode.
public:
Lazy(Func<T> ^ valueFactory, System::Threading::LazyThreadSafetyMode mode);
public Lazy (Func<T> valueFactory, System.Threading.LazyThreadSafetyMode mode);
new Lazy<'T> : Func<'T> * System.Threading.LazyThreadSafetyMode -> Lazy<'T>
Public Sub New (valueFactory As Func(Of T), mode As LazyThreadSafetyMode)
Parameters
- valueFactory
- Func<T>
The delegate that is invoked to produce the lazily initialized value when it is needed.
- mode
- LazyThreadSafetyMode
One of the enumeration values that specifies the thread safety mode.
Exceptions
mode
contains an invalid value.
valueFactory
is null
.
Examples
The following example demonstrates the use of this constructor to create a lazy initializer that enables multiple threads to race to create an object lazily. Multiple threads might succeed in creating instances, but all threads use the instance that was created first. In addition, the example demonstrates that exceptions are never cached when you specify LazyThreadSafetyMode.PublicationOnly, even if initialization is performed by a function instead of by the parameterless constructor of the lazily created type.
Note
For an example that demonstrates how to use this constructor in single-threaded scenarios (specifying LazyThreadSafetyMode.None for mode
), see the Lazy<T>(Boolean) constructor. For an example that demonstrates how to use this constructor to provide locking instead of race conditions in multithreaded scenarios (specifying LazyThreadSafetyMode.ExecutionAndPublication for mode
), see the Lazy<T>() constructor.
The example defines a LargeObject
class that will be initialized lazily by any of several threads. The four key sections of code illustrate the creation of the initializer, the actual initialization, the initialization function, and the constructor and finalizer of the LargeObject
class. At the beginning of the Main
method, the example creates the Lazy<T> object that performs lazy initialization of the LargeObject
:
lazyLargeObject = new Lazy<LargeObject>(InitLargeObject,
LazyThreadSafetyMode.PublicationOnly);
let lazyLargeObject = Lazy<LargeObject>(initLargeObject, LazyThreadSafetyMode.PublicationOnly)
lazyLargeObject = New Lazy(Of LargeObject)(AddressOf InitLargeObject, _
LazyThreadSafetyMode.PublicationOnly)
The lazy initializer uses a function to perform the initialization. In this case, a function is required because there is no parameterless constructor for the LargeObject
class.
The example creates and starts three threads that block on a ManualResetEvent object, so that the example can release the threads all at once. In the ThreadProc
method that's used by all three threads, calling the Value property creates the LargeObject
instance:
LargeObject large = null;
try
{
large = lazyLargeObject.Value;
// The following line introduces an artificial delay to exaggerate the race condition.
Thread.Sleep(5);
// IMPORTANT: Lazy initialization is thread-safe, but it doesn't protect the
// object after creation. You must lock the object before accessing it,
// unless the type is thread safe. (LargeObject is not thread safe.)
lock(large)
{
large.Data[0] = Thread.CurrentThread.ManagedThreadId;
Console.WriteLine("LargeObject was initialized by thread {0}; last used by thread {1}.",
large.InitializedBy, large.Data[0]);
}
}
catch (ApplicationException ex)
{
Console.WriteLine("ApplicationException: {0}", ex.Message);
}
try
let large = lazyLargeObject.Value
// The following line introduces an artificial delay to exaggerate the race condition.
Thread.Sleep 5
// IMPORTANT: Lazy initialization is thread-safe, but it doesn't protect the
// object after creation. You must lock the object before accessing it,
// unless the type is thread safe. (LargeObject is not thread safe.)
lock large (fun () ->
large.Data[0] <- Thread.CurrentThread.ManagedThreadId
printfn $"LargeObject was initialized by thread {large.InitializedBy} last used by thread {large.Data[0]}.")
with :? ApplicationException as ex ->
printfn $"ApplicationException: {ex.Message}"
Dim large As LargeObject = Nothing
Try
large = lazyLargeObject.Value
' The following line introduces an artificial delay to exaggerate the race condition.
Thread.Sleep(5)
' IMPORTANT: Lazy initialization is thread-safe, but it doesn't protect the
' object after creation. You must lock the object before accessing it,
' unless the type is thread safe. (LargeObject is not thread safe.)
SyncLock large
large.Data(0) = Thread.CurrentThread.ManagedThreadId
Console.WriteLine( _
"LargeObject was initialized by thread {0}; last used by thread {1}.", _
large.InitializedBy, large.Data(0))
End SyncLock
Catch ex As ApplicationException
Console.WriteLine("ApplicationException: {0}", ex.Message)
End Try
In the third key section of code, the lazy initialization function is called to create the LargeObject
instance. The function throws an exception the first time it's called:
static int instanceCount = 0;
static LargeObject InitLargeObject()
{
if (1 == Interlocked.Increment(ref instanceCount))
{
throw new ApplicationException(
String.Format("Lazy initialization function failed on thread {0}.",
Thread.CurrentThread.ManagedThreadId));
}
return new LargeObject(Thread.CurrentThread.ManagedThreadId);
}
let mutable instanceCount = 0
let initLargeObject () =
if 1 = Interlocked.Increment &instanceCount then
raise (ApplicationException $"Lazy initialization function failed on thread {Thread.CurrentThread.ManagedThreadId}.")
LargeObject Thread.CurrentThread.ManagedThreadId
Private Shared instanceCount As Integer = 0
Private Shared Function InitLargeObject() As LargeObject
If 1 = Interlocked.Increment(instanceCount) Then
Throw New ApplicationException( _
"Lazy initialization function failed on thread " & _
Thread.CurrentThread.ManagedThreadId & ".")
End If
Return New LargeObject(Thread.CurrentThread.ManagedThreadId)
End Function
With any other LazyThreadSafetyMode setting, an unhandled exception in the initialization function would be cached. However, LazyThreadSafetyMode.PublicationOnly suppresses exception caching. The output from the example demonstrates that a subsequent attempt to initialize the object succeeds.
Note
The exception message usually appears after messages indicating that other threads have successfully initialized the object. This is because of the delay introduced by throwing and catching the exception.
Because the constructor for the Lazy<T> instance specified LazyThreadSafetyMode.PublicationOnly, all three threads are allowed to create LargeObject
instances. The example demonstrates this by displaying console messages in the constructor and in the finalizer of the LargeObject
class:
public LargeObject(int initializedBy)
{
initBy = initializedBy;
Console.WriteLine("Constructor: Instance initializing on thread {0}", initBy);
}
~LargeObject()
{
Console.WriteLine("Finalizer: Instance was initialized on {0}", initBy);
}
type LargeObject(initBy) =
do
printfn $"Constructor: Instance initializing on thread {initBy}"
override _.Finalize() =
printfn $"Finalizer: Instance was initialized on {initBy}"
Public Sub New(ByVal initializedBy As Integer)
initBy = initializedBy
Console.WriteLine("Constructor: Instance initializing on thread {0}", initBy)
End Sub
Protected Overrides Sub Finalize()
Console.WriteLine("Finalizer: Instance was initialized on {0}", initBy)
End Sub
The Lazy<T> object ensures that only one instance is used by all threads (except the thread where the initialization function throws an exception). The output from the example shows this.
Note
For simplicity, this example uses a global instance of Lazy<T>, and all the methods are static
(Shared
in Visual Basic). These are not requirements for the use of lazy initialization.
using System;
using System.Threading;
class Program
{
static Lazy<LargeObject> lazyLargeObject = null;
// Factory function for lazy initialization.
static int instanceCount = 0;
static LargeObject InitLargeObject()
{
if (1 == Interlocked.Increment(ref instanceCount))
{
throw new ApplicationException(
String.Format("Lazy initialization function failed on thread {0}.",
Thread.CurrentThread.ManagedThreadId));
}
return new LargeObject(Thread.CurrentThread.ManagedThreadId);
}
static void Main()
{
// The lazy initializer is created here. LargeObject is not created until the
// ThreadProc method executes.
lazyLargeObject = new Lazy<LargeObject>(InitLargeObject,
LazyThreadSafetyMode.PublicationOnly);
// Create and start 3 threads, passing the same blocking event to all of them.
ManualResetEvent startingGate = new ManualResetEvent(false);
Thread[] threads = { new Thread(ThreadProc), new Thread(ThreadProc), new Thread(ThreadProc) };
foreach (Thread t in threads)
{
t.Start(startingGate);
}
// Give all 3 threads time to start and wait, then release them all at once.
Thread.Sleep(50);
startingGate.Set();
// Wait for all 3 threads to finish. (The order doesn't matter.)
foreach (Thread t in threads)
{
t.Join();
}
Console.WriteLine(
"\r\nThreads are complete. Running GC.Collect() to reclaim extra instances.");
GC.Collect();
// Allow time for garbage collection, which happens asynchronously.
Thread.Sleep(100);
Console.WriteLine("\r\nNote that only one instance of LargeObject was used.");
Console.WriteLine("Press Enter to end the program");
Console.ReadLine();
}
static void ThreadProc(object state)
{
// Wait for the signal.
ManualResetEvent waitForStart = (ManualResetEvent) state;
waitForStart.WaitOne();
LargeObject large = null;
try
{
large = lazyLargeObject.Value;
// The following line introduces an artificial delay to exaggerate the race condition.
Thread.Sleep(5);
// IMPORTANT: Lazy initialization is thread-safe, but it doesn't protect the
// object after creation. You must lock the object before accessing it,
// unless the type is thread safe. (LargeObject is not thread safe.)
lock(large)
{
large.Data[0] = Thread.CurrentThread.ManagedThreadId;
Console.WriteLine("LargeObject was initialized by thread {0}; last used by thread {1}.",
large.InitializedBy, large.Data[0]);
}
}
catch (ApplicationException ex)
{
Console.WriteLine("ApplicationException: {0}", ex.Message);
}
}
}
class LargeObject
{
int initBy = -1;
public int InitializedBy { get { return initBy; } }
public LargeObject(int initializedBy)
{
initBy = initializedBy;
Console.WriteLine("Constructor: Instance initializing on thread {0}", initBy);
}
~LargeObject()
{
Console.WriteLine("Finalizer: Instance was initialized on {0}", initBy);
}
public long[] Data = new long[100000000];
}
/* This example produces output similar to the following:
Constructor: Instance initializing on thread 5
Constructor: Instance initializing on thread 4
ApplicationException: Lazy initialization function failed on thread 3.
LargeObject was initialized by thread 5; last used by thread 5.
LargeObject was initialized by thread 5; last used by thread 4.
Threads are complete. Running GC.Collect() to reclaim extra instances.
Finalizer: Instance was initialized on 4
Note that only one instance of LargeObject was used.
Press Enter to end the program
Finalizer: Instance was initialized on 5
*/
open System
open System.Threading
type LargeObject(initBy) =
do
printfn $"Constructor: Instance initializing on thread {initBy}"
override _.Finalize() =
printfn $"Finalizer: Instance was initialized on {initBy}"
member _.InitializedBy = initBy
member val Data = Array.zeroCreate<int64> 100000000 with get
// Factory function for lazy initialization.
let mutable instanceCount = 0
let initLargeObject () =
if 1 = Interlocked.Increment &instanceCount then
raise (ApplicationException $"Lazy initialization function failed on thread {Thread.CurrentThread.ManagedThreadId}.")
LargeObject Thread.CurrentThread.ManagedThreadId
// The lazy initializer is created here. LargeObject is not created until the
// ThreadProc method executes.
let lazyLargeObject = Lazy<LargeObject>(initLargeObject, LazyThreadSafetyMode.PublicationOnly)
let threadProc (state: obj) =
// Wait for the signal.
let waitForStart = state :?> ManualResetEvent
waitForStart.WaitOne() |> ignore
try
let large = lazyLargeObject.Value
// The following line introduces an artificial delay to exaggerate the race condition.
Thread.Sleep 5
// IMPORTANT: Lazy initialization is thread-safe, but it doesn't protect the
// object after creation. You must lock the object before accessing it,
// unless the type is thread safe. (LargeObject is not thread safe.)
lock large (fun () ->
large.Data[0] <- Thread.CurrentThread.ManagedThreadId
printfn $"LargeObject was initialized by thread {large.InitializedBy} last used by thread {large.Data[0]}.")
with :? ApplicationException as ex ->
printfn $"ApplicationException: {ex.Message}"
// Create and start 3 threads, passing the same blocking event to all of them.
let startingGate = new ManualResetEvent false
let threads =
[| Thread(ParameterizedThreadStart threadProc); Thread(ParameterizedThreadStart threadProc); Thread(ParameterizedThreadStart threadProc) |]
for t in threads do
t.Start startingGate
// Give all 3 threads time to start and wait, then release them all at once.
Thread.Sleep 50
startingGate.Set() |> ignore
// Wait for all 3 threads to finish. (The order doesn't matter.)
for t in threads do
t.Join()
printfn "\nThreads are complete. Running GC.Collect() to reclaim extra instances."
GC.Collect()
// Allow time for garbage collection, which happens asynchronously.
Thread.Sleep 100
printfn "\nNote that only one instance of LargeObject was used."
printfn "Press Enter to end the program"
stdin.ReadLine() |> ignore
// This example produces output similar to the following:
// Constructor: Instance initializing on thread 5
// Constructor: Instance initializing on thread 4
// ApplicationException: Lazy initialization function failed on thread 3.
// LargeObject was initialized by thread 5 last used by thread 5.
// LargeObject was initialized by thread 5 last used by thread 4.
//
// Threads are complete. Running GC.Collect() to reclaim extra instances.
// Finalizer: Instance was initialized on 4
//
// Note that only one instance of LargeObject was used.
// Press Enter to end the program
//
// Finalizer: Instance was initialized on 5
Imports System.Threading
Friend Class Program
Private Shared lazyLargeObject As Lazy(Of LargeObject) = Nothing
' Factory function for lazy initialization.
Private Shared instanceCount As Integer = 0
Private Shared Function InitLargeObject() As LargeObject
If 1 = Interlocked.Increment(instanceCount) Then
Throw New ApplicationException( _
"Lazy initialization function failed on thread " & _
Thread.CurrentThread.ManagedThreadId & ".")
End If
Return New LargeObject(Thread.CurrentThread.ManagedThreadId)
End Function
Shared Sub Main()
' The lazy initializer is created here. LargeObject is not created until the
' ThreadProc method executes.
lazyLargeObject = New Lazy(Of LargeObject)(AddressOf InitLargeObject, _
LazyThreadSafetyMode.PublicationOnly)
' Create and start 3 threads, passing the same blocking event to all of them.
Dim startingGate As New ManualResetEvent(False)
Dim threads() As Thread = { _
New Thread(AddressOf ThreadProc), _
New Thread(AddressOf ThreadProc), _
New Thread(AddressOf ThreadProc) _
}
For Each t As Thread In threads
t.Start(startingGate)
Next t
' Give all 3 threads time to start and wait, then release them all at once.
Thread.Sleep(50)
startingGate.Set()
' Wait for all 3 threads to finish. (The order doesn't matter.)
For Each t As Thread In threads
t.Join()
Next t
Console.WriteLine(vbCrLf & _
"Threads are complete. Running GC.Collect() to reclaim extra instances.")
GC.Collect()
' Allow time for garbage collection, which happens asynchronously.
Thread.Sleep(100)
Console.WriteLine(vbCrLf & "Note that only one instance of LargeObject was used.")
Console.WriteLine("Press Enter to end the program")
Console.ReadLine()
End Sub
Private Shared Sub ThreadProc(ByVal state As Object)
' Wait for the signal.
Dim waitForStart As ManualResetEvent = CType(state, ManualResetEvent)
waitForStart.WaitOne()
Dim large As LargeObject = Nothing
Try
large = lazyLargeObject.Value
' The following line introduces an artificial delay to exaggerate the race condition.
Thread.Sleep(5)
' IMPORTANT: Lazy initialization is thread-safe, but it doesn't protect the
' object after creation. You must lock the object before accessing it,
' unless the type is thread safe. (LargeObject is not thread safe.)
SyncLock large
large.Data(0) = Thread.CurrentThread.ManagedThreadId
Console.WriteLine( _
"LargeObject was initialized by thread {0}; last used by thread {1}.", _
large.InitializedBy, large.Data(0))
End SyncLock
Catch ex As ApplicationException
Console.WriteLine("ApplicationException: {0}", ex.Message)
End Try
End Sub
End Class
Friend Class LargeObject
Private initBy As Integer = -1
Public ReadOnly Property InitializedBy() As Integer
Get
Return initBy
End Get
End Property
Public Sub New(ByVal initializedBy As Integer)
initBy = initializedBy
Console.WriteLine("Constructor: Instance initializing on thread {0}", initBy)
End Sub
Protected Overrides Sub Finalize()
Console.WriteLine("Finalizer: Instance was initialized on {0}", initBy)
End Sub
Public Data(99999999) As Long
End Class
' This example produces output similar to the following:
'
'Constructor: Instance initializing on thread 4
'ApplicationException: Lazy initialization function failed on thread 3.
'Constructor: Instance initializing on thread 5
'LargeObject was initialized by thread 4; last used by thread 4.
'LargeObject was initialized by thread 4; last used by thread 5.
'
'Threads are complete. Running GC.Collect() to reclaim extra instances.
'Finalizer: Instance was initialized on 5
'
'Note that only one instance of LargeObject was used.
'Press Enter to end the program
'
'Finalizer: Instance was initialized on 4
'
Remarks
The thread safety mode of a Lazy<T> instance describes the behavior when multiple threads try to initialize the Lazy<T> instance.
Exceptions that are thrown by valueFactory
are cached, unless mode
is LazyThreadSafetyMode.PublicationOnly. For more information, see the Lazy<T> class or the System.Threading.LazyThreadSafetyMode enumeration.