I'm experimenting ideas around using AppDomain to manage some legacy code contains lots of static fields in a multi-threaded environment.
I read answers this question: How to use an AppDomain to limit a static class' scope for thread-safe use?, thought it's quite promising and decided to try it out with a very simple class in assembly ClassLibrary1.dll:
namespace ClassLibrary1
{
public static class Class1
{
private static int Value = 0;
public static void IncrementAndPrint()
{
Console.WriteLine(Value++);
}
}
}
and here's my code that loads the assemblyinto 2 different app domains and invokes the IncrementAndPrint() several times:
var appDomain1 = System.AppDomain.CreateDomain("AppDomain1");
var appDomain2 = System.AppDomain.CreateDomain("AppDomain2");
var assemblyInAppDomain1 = appDomain1.Load("ClassLibrary1");
var assemblyInAppDomain2 = appDomain2.Load("ClassLibrary1");
var class1InAppDomain1 = assemblyInAppDomain1.GetType("ClassLibrary1.Class1");
var class1InAppDomain2 = assemblyInAppDomain2.GetType("ClassLibrary1.Class1");
class1InAppDomain1.InvokeMember("IncrementAndPrint", BindingFlags.Static | BindingFlags.Public | BindingFlags.InvokeMethod, null, null, null);
class1InAppDomain1.InvokeMember("IncrementAndPrint", BindingFlags.Static | BindingFlags.Public | BindingFlags.InvokeMethod, null, null, null);
class1InAppDomain1.InvokeMember("IncrementAndPrint", BindingFlags.Static | BindingFlags.Public | BindingFlags.InvokeMethod, null, null, null);
class1InAppDomain2.InvokeMember("IncrementAndPrint", BindingFlags.Static | BindingFlags.Public | BindingFlags.InvokeMethod, null, null, null);
class1InAppDomain2.InvokeMember("IncrementAndPrint", BindingFlags.Static | BindingFlags.Public | BindingFlags.InvokeMethod, null, null, null);
class1InAppDomain2.InvokeMember("IncrementAndPrint", BindingFlags.Static | BindingFlags.Public | BindingFlags.InvokeMethod, null, null, null);
I was expecting the output to be:
0
1
2
0
1
2
because there will be a copy of the static field Value to local to each instance of AppDomain. However, instead what I got was:
0
1
2
3
4
5
which tells me they are still all sharing the same copy of the static field Value.
Can anyone tell me what have I done wrong here?
Update:
I tried Erik's suggestion, now I call CreateInstanceAndUnwrap() method of the AppDomain class instead of calling Load() and GetType() as shown below. Also, I've converted IncrementAndPrint to an instance method rather than a static method. However, I'm still getting the same result.
var appDomain1 = System.AppDomain.CreateDomain("AppDomain1");
var appDomain2 = System.AppDomain.CreateDomain("AppDomain2");
var class1InAppDomain1 = (Class1)appDomain1.CreateInstanceAndUnwrap("ClassLibrary1", "ClassLibrary1.Class1");
var class1InAppDomain2 = (Class1)appDomain2.CreateInstanceAndUnwrap("ClassLibrary1", "ClassLibrary1.Class1");
class1InAppDomain1.IncrementAndPrint();
class1InAppDomain1.IncrementAndPrint();
class1InAppDomain1.IncrementAndPrint();
class1InAppDomain2.IncrementAndPrint();
class1InAppDomain2.IncrementAndPrint();
class1InAppDomain2.IncrementAndPrint();
See Question&Answers more detail:
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