Question

I was debating with a friend who states that the static constructor could give way to a race condition as the static constructor could be called multiple times. It seems this could only happen in high volume multi-threaded environments. Is that even possible?

I couldn't find any documentation to prove him wrong. Does anyone have any insight on this?

Thanks!

Était-ce utile?

La solution

The static constructor is called only once per AppDomain.
ECMA-335 states that the CLI shall guarantee that:

"A type initializer shall be executed exactly once for any given type, unless explicitly called by user code."

And i haven't heard of a convenient way to call type initializers in C#.

You could only run into problems if you create circular dependencies between Type initializers.
See here for an interesting article on that issue:
https://msmvps.com/blogs/jon_skeet/archive/2012/04/07/type-initializer-circular-dependencies.aspx)

Autres conseils

Is that even possible?

No. The CLR handles this for you, and prevents static constructors from being called more than once.

This is spelled out multiple times in the C# language specification. For example, section 3.1 states:

a static constructor for a type is run at most once per application domain.

Licencié sous: CC-BY-SA avec attribution
Non affilié à StackOverflow
scroll top