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Applications ASP.NET utilisant les handles d'attente

Les modèles de rappel et d’interrogation pour la gestion des opérations asynchrones sont utiles lorsque votre application ne traite qu’une seule opération asynchrone à la fois. Les modèles d’attente offrent un moyen plus flexible de traiter plusieurs opérations asynchrones. Il existe deux modèles d'attente nommés pour les méthodes WaitHandle utilisées pour leur implémentation : le modèle d’attente (N’importe lequel) et le modèle d’attente (tous).

Pour utiliser l’un ou l’autre modèle d’attente, vous devez utiliser la propriété AsyncWaitHandle de l’objet IAsyncResult retourné par les méthodes BeginExecuteNonQuery, BeginExecuteReader ou BeginExecuteXmlReader. Les méthodes WaitAny et WaitAll vous obligent toutes les deux à envoyer les objets WaitHandle comme un argument, rassemblés dans un tableau.

Les deux méthodes d’attente analysent les opérations asynchrones, en attente de la fin de l’opération. La méthode WaitAny attend que l’une des opérations soit terminée ou expire. Une fois que vous savez qu’une opération particulière est terminée, vous pouvez traiter ses résultats, puis continuer à attendre que l’opération suivante se termine ou expire. La méthode WaitAll attend que tous les processus du tableau d’instances WaitHandle se terminent ou expirent avant de continuer.

L’avantage des modèles d’attente est plus important lorsque vous devez exécuter plusieurs opérations de longue durée sur des serveurs différents ou lorsque votre serveur est suffisamment puissant pour traiter toutes les requêtes en même temps. Dans le cadre des exemples ici, trois requêtes émulent de longs processus en ajoutant des commandes WAITFOR de longueurs variées à des requêtes SELECT sans conséquence.

Exemple : modèle d'attente (un)

L’exemple suivant illustre le modèle d’attente (N’importe lequel). Après le démarrage de trois processus asynchrones, la méthode WaitAny est appelée pour attendre l’achèvement de l’un d’eux. À mesure que chaque processus se termine, la méthode EndExecuteReader est appelée et l’objet SqlDataReader résultant est lu. À ce stade, une application réelle utiliserait probablement le SqlDataReader pour remplir une partie de la page. Dans cet exemple simple, l’heure de fin du processus est ajoutée à une zone de texte correspondant au processus. Prises ensemble, ces heures dans les zones de texte illustrent le point suivant : le code est exécuté chaque fois qu'un processus s'achève.

Pour configurer cet exemple, créez un nouveau projet de site Web ASP.NET. Placez un contrôle Button et quatre contrôles TextBox sur la page (en acceptant le nom par défaut pour chaque contrôle).

Ajoutez le code suivant à la classe du formulaire, en modifiant la chaîne de connexion en fonction des besoins de votre environnement.

' Add these to the top of the class
Imports System
Imports System.Data
Imports System.Data.SqlClient
Imports System.Threading

' Add this code to the page's class:
    Private Function GetConnectionString() As String
        ' To avoid storing the connection string in your code,
        ' you can retrieve it from a configuration file.

        ' If you have not included "Asynchronous Processing=true"
        ' in the connection string, the command will not be able
        ' to execute asynchronously.
        Return "Data Source=(local);Integrated Security=SSPI;" & _
          "Initial Catalog=AdventureWorks;" & _
          "Asynchronous Processing=true"
    End Function

    Sub Button1_Click( _
     ByVal sender As Object, ByVal e As System.EventArgs)

        ' In a real-world application, you might be connecting to
        '  three different servers or databases. For the example,
        '  we connect to only one.
        Dim connection1 As New SqlConnection(GetConnectionString())
        Dim connection2 As New SqlConnection(GetConnectionString())
        Dim connection3 As New SqlConnection(GetConnectionString())

        ' To keep the example simple, all three asynchronous
        ' processes select a row from the same table. WAITFOR
        ' commands are used to emulate long-running processes
        ' that complete after different periods of time.
        Dim commandText1 As String = _
            "WAITFOR DELAY '0:0:01';" & _
            "SELECT * FROM Production.Product " & _
            "WHERE ProductNumber = 'BL-2036'"

        Dim commandText2 As String = _
            "WAITFOR DELAY '0:0:05';" & _
            "SELECT * FROM Production.Product " & _
            "WHERE ProductNumber = 'BL-2036'"

        Dim commandText3 As String = _
            "WAITFOR DELAY '0:0:10';" & _
            "SELECT * FROM Production.Product " & _
            "WHERE ProductNumber = 'BL-2036'"

        Dim waitHandles(2) As WaitHandle
        Try
            ' For each process, open a connection and begin execution.
            ' Use the IAsyncResult object returned by
            ' BeginExecuteReader to add a WaitHandle for the process
            ' to the array.
            connection1.Open()
            Dim command1 As New SqlCommand(commandText1, connection1)
            Dim result1 As IAsyncResult = _
             command1.BeginExecuteReader()
            waitHandles(0) = result1.AsyncWaitHandle

            connection2.Open()
            Dim command2 As New SqlCommand(commandText2, connection2)
            Dim result2 As IAsyncResult = _
             command2.BeginExecuteReader()
            waitHandles(1) = result2.AsyncWaitHandle

            connection3.Open()
            Dim command3 As New SqlCommand(commandText3, connection3)
            Dim result3 As IAsyncResult = _
             command3.BeginExecuteReader()
            waitHandles(2) = result3.AsyncWaitHandle

            Dim index As Integer
            For countWaits As Integer = 1 To 3
                ' WaitAny waits for any of the processes to complete.
                ' The return value is either the index of the
                ' array element whose process just completed, or
                ' the WaitTimeout value.
                index = WaitHandle.WaitAny(waitHandles, 60000, False)
                ' This example doesn't actually do anything with the
                ' data returned by the processes, but the code opens
                ' readers for each just to demonstrate the concept.
                ' Instead of using the returned data to fill the
                ' controls on the page, the example adds the time
                ' the process was completed to the corresponding
                ' text box.
                Select Case index
                    Case 0
                        Dim reader1 As SqlDataReader
                        reader1 = command1.EndExecuteReader(result1)
                        If reader1.Read Then
                            TextBox1.Text = _
                             "Completed " & _
                             System.DateTime.Now.ToLongTimeString()
                        End If
                        reader1.Close()

                    Case 1
                        Dim reader2 As SqlDataReader
                        reader2 = command2.EndExecuteReader(result2)
                        If reader2.Read Then
                            TextBox2.Text = _
                             "Completed " & _
                             System.DateTime.Now.ToLongTimeString()
                        End If
                        reader2.Close()
                    Case 2
                        Dim reader3 As SqlDataReader
                        reader3 = command3.EndExecuteReader(result3)
                        If reader3.Read Then
                            TextBox3.Text = _
                             "Completed " & _
                             System.DateTime.Now.ToLongTimeString()
                        End If
                        reader3.Close()
                    Case WaitHandle.WaitTimeout
                        Throw New Exception("Timeout")
                End Select

            Next
        Catch ex As Exception
            TextBox4.Text = ex.ToString
        End Try
        connection1.Close()
        connection2.Close()
        connection3.Close()

    End Sub
// Add the following using directives, if they aren't already there.
using System;
using System.Data;
using System.Configuration;
using System.Web;
using System.Web.Security;
using System.Web.UI;
using System.Web.UI.WebControls;
using System.Web.UI.WebControls.WebParts;
using System.Web.UI.HtmlControls;
using System.Threading;
using System.Data.SqlClient;

// Add this code to the page's class
string GetConnectionString()
     //  To avoid storing the connection string in your code,
     //  you can retrieve it from a configuration file.
     //  If you have not included "Asynchronous Processing=true"
     //  in the connection string, the command will not be able
     //  to execute asynchronously.
{
     return "Data Source=(local);Integrated Security=SSPI;" +
          "Initial Catalog=AdventureWorks;" +
          "Asynchronous Processing=true";
}
void Button1_Click(object sender, System.EventArgs e)
{
     //  In a real-world application, you might be connecting to
     //   three different servers or databases. For the example,
     //   we connect to only one.

     SqlConnection connection1 =
          new SqlConnection(GetConnectionString());
     SqlConnection connection2 =
          new SqlConnection(GetConnectionString());
     SqlConnection connection3 =
          new SqlConnection(GetConnectionString());
     //  To keep the example simple, all three asynchronous
     //  processes select a row from the same table. WAITFOR
     //  commands are used to emulate long-running processes
     //  that complete after different periods of time.

     string commandText1 = "WAITFOR DELAY '0:0:01';" +
          "SELECT * FROM Production.Product " +
          "WHERE ProductNumber = 'BL-2036'";
     string commandText2 = "WAITFOR DELAY '0:0:05';" +
          "SELECT * FROM Production.Product " +
          "WHERE ProductNumber = 'BL-2036'";
     string commandText3 = "WAITFOR DELAY '0:0:10';" +
          "SELECT * FROM Production.Product " +
          "WHERE ProductNumber = 'BL-2036'";
     try
          //  For each process, open a connection and begin
          //  execution. Use the IAsyncResult object returned by
          //  BeginExecuteReader to add a WaitHandle for the
          //  process to the array.
     {
          connection1.Open();
          SqlCommand command1 =
               new SqlCommand(commandText1, connection1);
          IAsyncResult result1 = command1.BeginExecuteReader();
          WaitHandle waitHandle1 = result1.AsyncWaitHandle;

          connection2.Open();
          SqlCommand command2 =
               new SqlCommand(commandText2, connection2);
          IAsyncResult result2 = command2.BeginExecuteReader();
          WaitHandle waitHandle2 = result2.AsyncWaitHandle;

          connection3.Open();
          SqlCommand command3 =
               new SqlCommand(commandText3, connection3);
          IAsyncResult result3 = command3.BeginExecuteReader();
          WaitHandle waitHandle3 = result3.AsyncWaitHandle;

          WaitHandle[] waitHandles = {
               waitHandle1, waitHandle2, waitHandle3
          };

          int index;
          for (int countWaits = 0; countWaits <= 2; countWaits++)
          {
               //  WaitAny waits for any of the processes to
               //  complete. The return value is either the index
               //  of the array element whose process just
               //  completed, or the WaitTimeout value.

               index = WaitHandle.WaitAny(waitHandles,
                    60000, false);
               //  This example doesn't actually do anything with
               //  the data returned by the processes, but the
               //  code opens readers for each just to demonstrate
               //  the concept.
               //  Instead of using the returned data to fill the
               //  controls on the page, the example adds the time
               //  the process was completed to the corresponding
               //  text box.

               switch (index)
               {
                    case 0:
                         SqlDataReader reader1;
                         reader1 =
                              command1.EndExecuteReader(result1);
                         if (reader1.Read())
                         {
                           TextBox1.Text =
                           "Completed " +
                           System.DateTime.Now.ToLongTimeString();
                         }
                         reader1.Close();
                         break;
                    case 1:
                         SqlDataReader reader2;
                         reader2 =
                              command2.EndExecuteReader(result2);
                         if (reader2.Read())
                         {
                           TextBox2.Text =
                           "Completed " +
                           System.DateTime.Now.ToLongTimeString();
                         }
                         reader2.Close();
                         break;
                    case 2:
                         SqlDataReader reader3;
                         reader3 =
                              command3.EndExecuteReader(result3);
                         if (reader3.Read())
                         {
                           TextBox3.Text =
                           "Completed " +
                           System.DateTime.Now.ToLongTimeString();
                         }
                         reader3.Close();
                         break;
                    case WaitHandle.WaitTimeout:
                         throw new Exception("Timeout");
                         break;
               }
          }
     }
     catch (Exception ex)
     {
          TextBox4.Text = ex.ToString();
     }
     connection1.Close();
     connection2.Close();
     connection3.Close();
}

Exemple : modèle d'attente (tout)

L’exemple suivant illustre le modèle d’attente (Tous). Après le démarrage de trois processus asynchrones, la méthode WaitAll est appelée pour attendre l’achèvement ou l’expiration des processus.

Comme dans cet exemple de modèle d’attente (N’importe lequel), l’heure de fin du processus est ajoutée à une zone de texte correspondant au processus. Là encore, ces heures dans les zones de texte illustrent le point suivant : d'après la méthode WaitAny, le code est exécuté uniquement après l'achèvement de tous les processus.

Pour configurer cet exemple, créez un nouveau projet de site Web ASP.NET. Placez un contrôle Button et quatre contrôles TextBox sur la page (en acceptant le nom par défaut pour chaque contrôle).

Ajoutez le code suivant à la classe du formulaire, en modifiant la chaîne de connexion en fonction des besoins de votre environnement.

' Add these to the top of the class
Imports System
Imports System.Data
Imports System.Data.SqlClient
Imports System.Threading

' Add this code to the page's class:
    Private Function GetConnectionString() As String
        ' To avoid storing the connection string in your code,
        ' you can retrieve it from a configuration file.

        ' If you have not included "Asynchronous Processing=true"
        ' in the connection string, the command will not be able
        ' to execute asynchronously.
        Return "Data Source=(local);Integrated Security=SSPI;" & _
          "Initial Catalog=AdventureWorks;" & _
          "Asynchronous Processing=true"
    End Function
    Sub Button1_Click( _
     ByVal sender As Object, ByVal e As System.EventArgs)

        ' In a real-world application, you might be connecting to
        '  three different servers or databases. For the example,
        '  we connect to only one.
        Dim connection1 As New SqlConnection(GetConnectionString())
        Dim connection2 As New SqlConnection(GetConnectionString())
        Dim connection3 As New SqlConnection(GetConnectionString())

        ' To keep the example simple, all three asynchronous
        ' processes select a row from the same table. WAITFOR
        ' commands are used to emulate long-running processes
        ' that complete after different periods of time.
        Dim commandText1 As String = _
         "UPDATE Production.Product " & _
         "SET ReorderPoint = ReorderPoint + 1 " & _
         "WHERE ReorderPoint Is Not Null;" & _
         "WAITFOR DELAY '0:0:01';" & _
         "UPDATE Production.Product " & _
         "SET ReorderPoint = ReorderPoint - 1 " & _
         "WHERE ReorderPoint Is Not Null"

        Dim commandText2 As String = _
         "UPDATE Production.Product " & _
         "SET ReorderPoint = ReorderPoint + 1 " & _
         "WHERE ReorderPoint Is Not Null;" & _
         "WAITFOR DELAY '0:0:05';" & _
         "UPDATE Production.Product " & _
         "SET ReorderPoint = ReorderPoint - 1 " & _
         "WHERE ReorderPoint Is Not Null"

        Dim commandText3 As String = _
         "UPDATE Production.Product " & _
         "SET ReorderPoint = ReorderPoint + 1 " & _
         "WHERE ReorderPoint Is Not Null;" & _
         "WAITFOR DELAY '0:0:10';" & _
         "UPDATE Production.Product " & _
         "SET ReorderPoint = ReorderPoint - 1 " & _
         "WHERE ReorderPoint Is Not Null"

        Dim waitHandles(2) As WaitHandle

        Try
            ' For each process, open a connection and begin execution.
            ' Use the IAsyncResult object returned by
            ' BeginExecuteReader to add a WaitHandle for the process
            ' to the array.
            connection1.Open()
            Dim command1 As New SqlCommand(commandText1, connection1)
            Dim result1 As IAsyncResult = _
             command1.BeginExecuteNonQuery()
            waitHandles(0) = result1.AsyncWaitHandle

            connection2.Open()
            Dim command2 As New SqlCommand(commandText2, connection2)
            Dim result2 As IAsyncResult = _
             command2.BeginExecuteNonQuery()
            waitHandles(1) = result2.AsyncWaitHandle

            connection3.Open()
            Dim command3 As New SqlCommand(commandText3, connection3)
            Dim result3 As IAsyncResult = _
             command3.BeginExecuteNonQuery()
            waitHandles(2) = result3.AsyncWaitHandle

            ' WaitAll waits for all of the processes to complete.
            ' The return value is True if all processes completed,
            ' False if any process timed out.
            Dim result As Boolean = _
             WaitHandle.WaitAll(waitHandles, 60000, False)
            If result Then
                Dim rowCount1 As Long = _
                 command1.EndExecuteNonQuery(result1)
                TextBox1.Text = _
                 "Completed " & _
                 System.DateTime.Now.ToLongTimeString()

                Dim rowCount2 As Long = _
                 command2.EndExecuteNonQuery(result2)
                TextBox2.Text = _
                 "Completed " & _
                 System.DateTime.Now.ToLongTimeString()

                Dim rowCount3 As Long = _
                 command3.EndExecuteNonQuery(result3)
                TextBox3.Text = _
                 "Completed " & _
                 System.DateTime.Now.ToLongTimeString()
            Else
                Throw New Exception("Timeout")
            End If
        Catch ex As Exception
            TextBox4.Text = ex.ToString
        End Try
        connection1.Close()
        connection2.Close()
        connection3.Close()

    End Sub
// Add the following using directives, if they aren't already there.
using System;
using System.Data;
using System.Configuration;
using System.Web;
using System.Web.Security;
using System.Web.UI;
using System.Web.UI.WebControls;
using System.Web.UI.WebControls.WebParts;
using System.Web.UI.HtmlControls;
using System.Threading;
using System.Data.SqlClient;

// Add this code to the page's class
string GetConnectionString()
    //  To avoid storing the connection string in your code,
    //  you can retrieve it from a configuration file.
    //  If you have not included "Asynchronous Processing=true"
    //  in the connection string, the command will not be able
    //  to execute asynchronously.
{
    return "Data Source=(local);Integrated Security=SSPI;" +
        "Initial Catalog=AdventureWorks;" +
        "Asynchronous Processing=true";
}
void Button1_Click(object sender, System.EventArgs e)
{
    //  In a real-world application, you might be connecting to
    //   three different servers or databases. For the example,
    //   we connect to only one.

    SqlConnection connection1 =
        new SqlConnection(GetConnectionString());
    SqlConnection connection2 =
        new SqlConnection(GetConnectionString());
    SqlConnection connection3 =
        new SqlConnection(GetConnectionString());
    //  To keep the example simple, all three asynchronous
    //  processes execute UPDATE queries that result in
      //  no change to the data. WAITFOR
    //  commands are used to emulate long-running processes
    //  that complete after different periods of time.

    string commandText1 =
        "UPDATE Production.Product " +
        "SET ReorderPoint = ReorderPoint + 1 " +
        "WHERE ReorderPoint Is Not Null;" +
        "WAITFOR DELAY '0:0:01';" +
        "UPDATE Production.Product " +
        "SET ReorderPoint = ReorderPoint - 1 " +
        "WHERE ReorderPoint Is Not Null";

    string commandText2 =
      "UPDATE Production.Product " +
      "SET ReorderPoint = ReorderPoint + 1 " +
      "WHERE ReorderPoint Is Not Null;" +
      "WAITFOR DELAY '0:0:05';" +
      "UPDATE Production.Product " +
      "SET ReorderPoint = ReorderPoint - 1 " +
      "WHERE ReorderPoint Is Not Null";

    string commandText3 =
       "UPDATE Production.Product " +
       "SET ReorderPoint = ReorderPoint + 1 " +
       "WHERE ReorderPoint Is Not Null;" +
       "WAITFOR DELAY '0:0:10';" +
       "UPDATE Production.Product " +
       "SET ReorderPoint = ReorderPoint - 1 " +
       "WHERE ReorderPoint Is Not Null";
    try
        //  For each process, open a connection and begin
        //  execution. Use the IAsyncResult object returned by
        //  BeginExecuteReader to add a WaitHandle for the
        //  process to the array.
    {
        connection1.Open();
        SqlCommand command1 =
            new SqlCommand(commandText1, connection1);
        IAsyncResult result1 = command1.BeginExecuteNonQuery();
        WaitHandle waitHandle1 = result1.AsyncWaitHandle;
        connection2.Open();

        SqlCommand command2 =
            new SqlCommand(commandText2, connection2);
        IAsyncResult result2 = command2.BeginExecuteNonQuery();
        WaitHandle waitHandle2 = result2.AsyncWaitHandle;
        connection3.Open();

        SqlCommand command3 =
            new SqlCommand(commandText3, connection3);
        IAsyncResult result3 = command3.BeginExecuteNonQuery();
        WaitHandle waitHandle3 = result3.AsyncWaitHandle;

        WaitHandle[] waitHandles = {
            waitHandle1, waitHandle2, waitHandle3
        };

        bool result;
        //  WaitAll waits for all of the processes to
        //  complete. The return value is True if the processes
        //  all completed successfully, False if any process
        //  timed out.

        result = WaitHandle.WaitAll(waitHandles, 60000, false);
        if(result)
        {
            long rowCount1 =
                command1.EndExecuteNonQuery(result1);
            TextBox1.Text = "Completed " +
                System.DateTime.Now.ToLongTimeString();
            long rowCount2 =
                command2.EndExecuteNonQuery(result2);
            TextBox2.Text = "Completed " +
                System.DateTime.Now.ToLongTimeString();

            long rowCount3 =
                command3.EndExecuteNonQuery(result3);
            TextBox3.Text = "Completed " +
                System.DateTime.Now.ToLongTimeString();
        }
        else
        {
            throw new Exception("Timeout");
        }
    }

    catch (Exception ex)
    {
        TextBox4.Text = ex.ToString();
    }
    connection1.Close();
    connection2.Close();
    connection3.Close();
}

Voir aussi