I wanted to say that you might as well use a Dictionary<string,object> isntead of an ExpandoObject, but then I saw that ExpandObject actually implementsIDictionary<string,object>
I mean, I can see that attributes just fetches _attributes, but it might change, so when I want to pass the value to the other handlers, just pass the value, or _attributes.
I have a method that is called inside a Task. There can be many such tasks concurrently, and I want to limit concurrency.
So I have a counter, and in the beginning of the method I call var currentCount = Interlocked.Increment(ref _counter); and return if it's over the limit. In the finally clause, I decrement the counter with Interlocked.Decrement.
Now, this seems to work inside a given task (this method is called several times, serially, in a loop), but after the last one is executed, my counter remains incremented.
Do tasks inherit task schedulers from their parent tasks?
The main entry point is a WebApi service call that does the heavy lifting. As part of the main work, it starts a background tasks and lets it work unattached.
@RoelvanUden The main Task loads some data, processes each in a loop (inside the Task). THe inner loop is the method that I want to limit.
So I have multiple tasks, each running multiple iterations.
And I want to limit concurrency of the internal iteration.
Still, my simple, naive counter should simply work. When I debug I see that Interlocked.Decrement doesn't decrement, but I don't trust the debugger with these method calls.
It's strange, though. The internal loop does increment and decrement properly. But when I get to the second task, it's up by one.
1. Main method calls `public async Task ExecuteStuffAsync(long caseId)`. and doesn't await the resulting task, letting it run in the background. 2. `ExecuteStuffAsync` loads a set of processes to execute, and calls `ExecuteAsync` on each, running them one after the other.
They all have ConfigureAwait(false).
ExecuteAsync increments the counter, checks it, and decrements it in the finally block.
For some reason, the loop of ExecuteAsync works fine, the counter gets incremented and decremented. But when I get to the second time I get to ExecuteStuffAsync, the counter is at 1, not 0.
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan I feel Your pain. I have a project put to the bookshelf for months just because of having similar parallel bug in it. Couldn't figure out how to solve it... I wrote fake classes to TcpListener, and TcpClient and stuff, so it should receive Streams just like from normal network. I have a test, where 10 users connects in the same time, but the 10th connection does it's job just after the scheduler asserts connection count = 10
I try to manually schedule the stuff with Rx, so the Scheduler is TestScheduler, and I have control over what happens when.
tho 1 month of futile setting, it won't always giving me the result of 10
it also depends on the ordering of running tests...
hey guys, so I'm trying to work on System.Web.Mobile library and it doesn't seem to exist on VS 2010, any ideas? The hing is that the controls looks so small on mobile unlike the regular browser
The whole idea allows web-oriented developers to spread towards offline applications. Even if we arent there yet (performance-wise) it doesnt mean we won't be in a few years
it's just that if you kind of just want to get something done and don't want your devs to learn a whole new thing, you can use a slightly modified browser