ReaderWriterLock.AcquireReaderLock Method
Definition
Important
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Acquires a reader lock.
Overloads
AcquireReaderLock(Int32) |
Acquires a reader lock, using an Int32 value for the time-out. |
AcquireReaderLock(TimeSpan) |
Acquires a reader lock, using a TimeSpan value for the time-out. |
AcquireReaderLock(Int32)
- Source:
- ReaderWriterLock.cs
- Source:
- ReaderWriterLock.cs
- Source:
- ReaderWriterLock.cs
Acquires a reader lock, using an Int32 value for the time-out.
public:
void AcquireReaderLock(int millisecondsTimeout);
public void AcquireReaderLock (int millisecondsTimeout);
[System.Runtime.Versioning.UnsupportedOSPlatform("browser")]
public void AcquireReaderLock (int millisecondsTimeout);
member this.AcquireReaderLock : int -> unit
[<System.Runtime.Versioning.UnsupportedOSPlatform("browser")>]
member this.AcquireReaderLock : int -> unit
Public Sub AcquireReaderLock (millisecondsTimeout As Integer)
Parameters
- millisecondsTimeout
- Int32
The time-out in milliseconds.
- Attributes
Exceptions
millisecondsTimeout
expires before the lock request is granted.
Examples
The following code example shows how to acquire and release a reader lock, and how to handle the exception thrown when a request times out.
This code is part of a larger example provided for the ReaderWriterLock class.
// The complete code is located in the ReaderWriterLock
// class topic.
using namespace System;
using namespace System::Threading;
public ref class Test
{
public:
// Declaring the ReaderWriterLock at the class level
// makes it visible to all threads.
static ReaderWriterLock^ rwl = gcnew ReaderWriterLock;
// For this example, the shared resource protected by the
// ReaderWriterLock is just an integer.
static int resource = 0;
// The complete code is located in the ReaderWriterLock class topic.
using System;
using System.Threading;
public class Example
{
static ReaderWriterLock rwl = new ReaderWriterLock();
// Define the shared resource protected by the ReaderWriterLock.
static int resource = 0;
' The complete code is located in the ReaderWriterLock class topic.
Imports System.Threading
Public Module Example
Private rwl As New ReaderWriterLock()
' Define the shared resource protected by the ReaderWriterLock.
Private resource As Integer = 0
// Shows how to request and release a reader lock, and
// how to handle time-outs.
static void ReadFromResource( int timeOut )
{
try
{
rwl->AcquireReaderLock( timeOut );
try
{
// It is safe for this thread to read from
// the shared resource.
Display( String::Format( "reads resource value {0}", resource ) );
Interlocked::Increment( reads );
}
finally
{
// Ensure that the lock is released.
rwl->ReleaseReaderLock();
}
}
catch ( ApplicationException^ )
{
// The reader lock request timed out.
Interlocked::Increment( readerTimeouts );
}
}
// Request and release a reader lock, and handle time-outs.
static void ReadFromResource(int timeOut)
{
try {
rwl.AcquireReaderLock(timeOut);
try {
// It is safe for this thread to read from the shared resource.
Display("reads resource value " + resource);
Interlocked.Increment(ref reads);
}
finally {
// Ensure that the lock is released.
rwl.ReleaseReaderLock();
}
}
catch (ApplicationException) {
// The reader lock request timed out.
Interlocked.Increment(ref readerTimeouts);
}
}
' Request and release a reader lock, and handle time-outs.
Sub ReadFromResource(timeOut As Integer)
Try
rwl.AcquireReaderLock(timeOut)
Try
' It's safe for this thread to read from the shared resource.
Display("reads resource value " & resource)
Interlocked.Increment(reads)
Finally
' Ensure that the lock is released.
rwl.ReleaseReaderLock()
End Try
Catch ex As ApplicationException
' The reader lock request timed out.
Interlocked.Increment(readerTimeouts)
End Try
End Sub
};
}
End Module
Remarks
AcquireReaderLock blocks if a different thread has the writer lock, or if at least one thread is waiting for the writer lock.
Note
If the current thread already has the writer lock, no reader lock is acquired. Instead, the lock count on the writer lock is incremented. This prevents a thread from blocking on its own writer lock. The result is exactly the same as calling AcquireWriterLock, and an additional call to ReleaseWriterLock is required when releasing the writer lock.
AcquireReaderLock
supports recursive reader-lock requests. That is, a thread can call AcquireReaderLock multiple times, which increments the lock count each time. You must call ReleaseReaderLock once for each time you call AcquireReaderLock
. Alternatively, you can call ReleaseLock to reduce the lock count to zero immediately.
Recursive lock requests are always granted immediately, without placing the requesting thread in the reader queue. Use recursive locks with caution, to avoid blocking writer-lock requests for long periods.
For valid time-out values, see ReaderWriterLock.
See also
Applies to
AcquireReaderLock(TimeSpan)
- Source:
- ReaderWriterLock.cs
- Source:
- ReaderWriterLock.cs
- Source:
- ReaderWriterLock.cs
Acquires a reader lock, using a TimeSpan value for the time-out.
public:
void AcquireReaderLock(TimeSpan timeout);
public void AcquireReaderLock (TimeSpan timeout);
[System.Runtime.Versioning.UnsupportedOSPlatform("browser")]
public void AcquireReaderLock (TimeSpan timeout);
member this.AcquireReaderLock : TimeSpan -> unit
[<System.Runtime.Versioning.UnsupportedOSPlatform("browser")>]
member this.AcquireReaderLock : TimeSpan -> unit
Public Sub AcquireReaderLock (timeout As TimeSpan)
Parameters
- timeout
- TimeSpan
A TimeSpan
specifying the time-out period.
- Attributes
Exceptions
timeout
expires before the lock request is granted.
timeout
specifies a negative value other than -1 milliseconds.
Remarks
AcquireReaderLock blocks if a different thread has the writer lock, or if at least one thread is waiting for the writer lock.
Note
If the current thread already has the writer lock, no reader lock is acquired. Instead, the lock count on the writer lock is incremented. This prevents a thread from blocking on its own writer lock. The result is exactly the same as calling AcquireWriterLock, and an additional call to ReleaseWriterLock is required when releasing the writer lock.
AcquireReaderLock
supports recursive reader-lock requests. That is, a thread can call AcquireReaderLock multiple times, which increments the lock count each time. You must call ReleaseReaderLock once for each time you call AcquireReaderLock
. Alternatively, you can call ReleaseLock to reduce the lock count to zero immediately.
Recursive lock requests are always granted immediately, without placing the requesting thread in the reader queue. Use recursive locks with caution, to avoid blocking writer-lock requests for long periods.
For valid time-out values, see ReaderWriterLock.
See also
Applies to
.NET