Asynchronous file access (C#)
You can use the async feature to access files. By using the async feature, you can call into asynchronous methods without using callbacks or splitting your code across multiple methods or lambda expressions. To make synchronous code asynchronous, you just call an asynchronous method instead of a synchronous method and add a few keywords to the code.
You might consider the following reasons for adding asynchrony to file access calls:
- Asynchrony makes UI applications more responsive because the UI thread that launches the operation can perform other work. If the UI thread must execute code that takes a long time (for example, more than 50 milliseconds), the UI may freeze until the I/O is complete and the UI thread can again process keyboard and mouse input and other events.
- Asynchrony improves the scalability of ASP.NET and other server-based applications by reducing the need for threads. If the application uses a dedicated thread per response and a thousand requests are being handled simultaneously, a thousand threads are needed. Asynchronous operations often don't need to use a thread during the wait. They use the existing I/O completion thread briefly at the end.
- The latency of a file access operation might be very low under current conditions, but the latency may greatly increase in the future. For example, a file may be moved to a server that's across the world.
- The added overhead of using the Async feature is small.
- Asynchronous tasks can easily be run in parallel.
Use appropriate classes
The simple examples in this topic demonstrate File.WriteAllTextAsync and File.ReadAllTextAsync. For fine control over the file I/O operations, use the FileStream class, which has an option that causes asynchronous I/O to occur at the operating system level. By using this option, you can avoid blocking a thread pool thread in many cases. To enable this option, you specify the useAsync=true
or options=FileOptions.Asynchronous
argument in the constructor call.
You can't use this option with StreamReader and StreamWriter if you open them directly by specifying a file path. However, you can use this option if you provide them a Stream that the FileStream class opened. Asynchronous calls are faster in UI apps even if a thread pool thread is blocked, because the UI thread isn't blocked during the wait.
Write text
The following examples write text to a file. At each await statement, the method immediately exits. When the file I/O is complete, the method resumes at the statement that follows the await statement. The async modifier is in the definition of methods that use the await statement.
Simple example
public async Task SimpleWriteAsync()
{
string filePath = "simple.txt";
string text = $"Hello World";
await File.WriteAllTextAsync(filePath, text);
}
Finite control example
public async Task ProcessWriteAsync()
{
string filePath = "temp.txt";
string text = $"Hello World{Environment.NewLine}";
await WriteTextAsync(filePath, text);
}
async Task WriteTextAsync(string filePath, string text)
{
byte[] encodedText = Encoding.Unicode.GetBytes(text);
using var sourceStream =
new FileStream(
filePath,
FileMode.Create, FileAccess.Write, FileShare.None,
bufferSize: 4096, useAsync: true);
await sourceStream.WriteAsync(encodedText, 0, encodedText.Length);
}
The original example has the statement await sourceStream.WriteAsync(encodedText, 0, encodedText.Length);
, which is a contraction of the following two statements:
Task theTask = sourceStream.WriteAsync(encodedText, 0, encodedText.Length);
await theTask;
The first statement returns a task and causes file processing to start. The second statement with the await causes the method to immediately exit and return a different task. When the file processing later completes, execution returns to the statement that follows the await.
Read text
The following examples read text from a file.
Simple example
public async Task SimpleReadAsync()
{
string filePath = "simple.txt";
string text = await File.ReadAllTextAsync(filePath);
Console.WriteLine(text);
}
Finite control example
The text is buffered and, in this case, placed into a StringBuilder. Unlike in the previous example, the evaluation of the await produces a value. The ReadAsync method returns a Task<Int32>, so the evaluation of the await produces an Int32
value numRead
after the operation completes. For more information, see Async Return Types (C#).
public async Task ProcessReadAsync()
{
try
{
string filePath = "temp.txt";
if (File.Exists(filePath) != false)
{
string text = await ReadTextAsync(filePath);
Console.WriteLine(text);
}
else
{
Console.WriteLine($"file not found: {filePath}");
}
}
catch (Exception ex)
{
Console.WriteLine(ex.Message);
}
}
async Task<string> ReadTextAsync(string filePath)
{
using var sourceStream =
new FileStream(
filePath,
FileMode.Open, FileAccess.Read, FileShare.Read,
bufferSize: 4096, useAsync: true);
var sb = new StringBuilder();
byte[] buffer = new byte[0x1000];
int numRead;
while ((numRead = await sourceStream.ReadAsync(buffer, 0, buffer.Length)) != 0)
{
string text = Encoding.Unicode.GetString(buffer, 0, numRead);
sb.Append(text);
}
return sb.ToString();
}
Parallel asynchronous I/O
The following examples demonstrate parallel processing by writing 10 text files.
Simple example
public async Task SimpleParallelWriteAsync()
{
string folder = Directory.CreateDirectory("tempfolder").Name;
IList<Task> writeTaskList = new List<Task>();
for (int index = 11; index <= 20; ++ index)
{
string fileName = $"file-{index:00}.txt";
string filePath = $"{folder}/{fileName}";
string text = $"In file {index}{Environment.NewLine}";
writeTaskList.Add(File.WriteAllTextAsync(filePath, text));
}
await Task.WhenAll(writeTaskList);
}
Finite control example
For each file, the WriteAsync method returns a task that is then added to a list of tasks. The await Task.WhenAll(tasks);
statement exits the method and resumes within the method when file processing is complete for all of the tasks.
The example closes all FileStream instances in a finally
block after the tasks are complete. If each FileStream
was instead created in a using
statement, the FileStream
might be disposed of before the task was complete.
Any performance boost is almost entirely from the parallel processing and not the asynchronous processing. The advantages of asynchrony are that it doesn't tie up multiple threads, and that it doesn't tie up the user interface thread.
public async Task ProcessMultipleWritesAsync()
{
IList<FileStream> sourceStreams = new List<FileStream>();
try
{
string folder = Directory.CreateDirectory("tempfolder").Name;
IList<Task> writeTaskList = new List<Task>();
for (int index = 1; index <= 10; ++ index)
{
string fileName = $"file-{index:00}.txt";
string filePath = $"{folder}/{fileName}";
string text = $"In file {index}{Environment.NewLine}";
byte[] encodedText = Encoding.Unicode.GetBytes(text);
var sourceStream =
new FileStream(
filePath,
FileMode.Create, FileAccess.Write, FileShare.None,
bufferSize: 4096, useAsync: true);
Task writeTask = sourceStream.WriteAsync(encodedText, 0, encodedText.Length);
sourceStreams.Add(sourceStream);
writeTaskList.Add(writeTask);
}
await Task.WhenAll(writeTaskList);
}
finally
{
foreach (FileStream sourceStream in sourceStreams)
{
sourceStream.Close();
}
}
}
When using the WriteAsync and ReadAsync methods, you can specify a CancellationToken, which you can use to cancel the operation mid-stream. For more information, see Cancellation in managed threads.