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c# - Can somebody explain this odd behavior when working with ThreadPool?

The Code

using System;
using System.Threading;

public delegate void LoadingProgressCallback(double PercentComplete,string ItemName);
public delegate void LoadCompleteCallback(int ItemID, string ItemName);

public static class Program
{
    public static void Main(string[] args)
    {
        LoadTest loadTest = new LoadTest();
        loadTest.LoadItems(args);
    }
}

public class LoadTest
{       
    ManualResetEvent resetEvent;
    int numThreads = 0;

    public LoadTest()
    {}

    public void LoadItems(string[] Items)
    {
        numThreads = 0;
        resetEvent = new ManualResetEvent(false);

        foreach(string item in Items)
        {
            Console.WriteLine("Adding {0} to ThreadPool",item);
            ThreadPool.QueueUserWorkItem
            (
                delegate
                {
                    Load(item, this.progCall, this.compCall);
                }
            );
            numThreads++;

            Thread.Sleep(100);//Remove this line

        }
        resetEvent.WaitOne();
    }

    public void progCall(double PercentComplete, string ItemName)
    {
        Console.WriteLine("{0}: is {1}% Complete [THREAD:{2}]",ItemName,PercentComplete.ToString(),Thread.CurrentThread.ManagedThreadId.ToString());
    }
    public void compCall(int ItemID, string ItemName)
    {
        Console.WriteLine("{0}: is Complete",ItemName);
        numThreads--;
        if(numThreads == 0)
        {
            resetEvent.Set();
        }
    }

    public void Load(string Item, LoadingProgressCallback progressCallback, LoadCompleteCallback completeCallback)
    {
        Console.WriteLine("Loading: {0} [THREAD:{1}]",Item,Thread.CurrentThread.ManagedThreadId.ToString());

        for(int i = 0; i <= 100; i++)
        {
            if(progressCallback != null)
            {
                progressCallback((double)i, Item);
            }
            Thread.Sleep(100);
        }
        if(completeCallback != null)
        {
            completeCallback(0,Item);
        }
    }
}

Observation

If I run this program from the command line, like this...

>TheProgram item1 item2

The output will look like this.

Adding item1 to ThreadPool
Loading: item1 [THREAD:3]
item1: is 0% Complete [THREAD:3]
Adding item2 to ThreadPool
Loading: item2 [THREAD:4]
item2: is 0% Complete [THREAD:4]
item1: is 1% Complete [THREAD:3]
item2: is 1% Complete [THREAD:4]
item1: is 2% Complete [THREAD:3]
item2: is 2% Complete [THREAD:4]

However, if I remove this line.

Thread.Sleep(100);//Remove this line

From the LoadItems method, the output looks like this.

Adding item1 to ThreadPool
Adding item2 to ThreadPool
Loading: item2 [THREAD:4]
Loading: item2 [THREAD:3]
item2: is 0% Complete [THREAD:4]
item2: is 0% Complete [THREAD:3]
item2: is 1% Complete [THREAD:4]
item2: is 1% Complete [THREAD:3]
item2: is 2% Complete [THREAD:3]
item2: is 2% Complete [THREAD:4]

The Question

It seems as though two threads are being used, though they both seem to be acting on the same data. Why does the code behave this way?

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1 Reply

0 votes
by (71.8m points)

You're closing over the loop variable, which gives you an unexpected result. Try this instead:

foreach(string item in Items)
{
    string item2 = item;
    Console.WriteLine("Adding {0} to ThreadPool", item2);
    ThreadPool.QueueUserWorkItem
    (
        delegate
        {
            Load(item2, this.progCall, this.compCall);
        }
    );
    numThreads++;

    Thread.Sleep(100);//Remove this line

}

References


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