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You're reading from  Parallel Programming and Concurrency with C# 10 and .NET 6

Product typeBook
Published inAug 2022
PublisherPackt
ISBN-139781803243672
Edition1st Edition
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Author (1)
Alvin Ashcraft
Alvin Ashcraft
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Alvin Ashcraft

Alvin Ashcraft is a software engineer and developer community champion with over 25 years of experience in software development. Working primarily with Microsoft Windows, web, and cloud technologies, his career has focused primarily on the healthcare industry. He has been awarded as a Microsoft MVP 11 times, most recently as a Windows Dev MVP. Alvin works in the Philadelphia area for Allscripts, a global healthcare software company, as a principal software engineer. He is also a board member of the TechBash Foundation, where he helps organize the annual TechBash developer conference. He has previously worked for companies such as Oracle, Genzeon, CSC, and ITG Pathfinders. Originally from the Allentown, PA area, Alvin currently resides in West Grove, PA with his wife and three daughters.
Read more about Alvin Ashcraft

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Handling threading exceptions

There are a couple of exception types that are specific to managed threading, including the ThreadInterruptedException exception that we covered in the previous section. Another exception type that is specific to threading is ThreadAbortException. However, as we discussed in the previous section, Thread.Abort is not supported in .NET 6, so, although this exception type exists in .NET 6, it is not necessary to handle it, as this type of exception is only possible in .NET Framework applications.

Two other exceptions are the ThreadStartException exception and the ThreadStateException exception. The ThreadStartException exception is thrown if there is a problem starting the managed thread before any user code in the thread can be executed. The ThreadStateException exception is thrown when a method on the thread is called that is not available when the thread is in its current ThreadState property. For example, calling Thread.Start on a thread that has already started is invalid and will cause a ThreadStateException exception. These types of exceptions can usually be avoided by checking the ThreadState property before acting on the thread.

It is important to implement comprehensive exception handling in multithreaded applications. If code in managed threads begins to fail silently without any logging or causing the process to terminate, the application can fall into an invalid state. This can also result in degrading performance and unresponsiveness. While this kind of degradation might be noticed quickly for many applications, some services, and other non-GUI-based applications, could continue for some time without any issues being noticed. Adding logging to the exception handlers along with a process to alert users when logs are reporting failures will help to prevent problems with undetected failing threads.

In the next section, we’ll discuss another challenge with multithreaded code: keeping data in-sync across multiple threads.

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Author (1)

author image
Alvin Ashcraft

Alvin Ashcraft is a software engineer and developer community champion with over 25 years of experience in software development. Working primarily with Microsoft Windows, web, and cloud technologies, his career has focused primarily on the healthcare industry. He has been awarded as a Microsoft MVP 11 times, most recently as a Windows Dev MVP. Alvin works in the Philadelphia area for Allscripts, a global healthcare software company, as a principal software engineer. He is also a board member of the TechBash Foundation, where he helps organize the annual TechBash developer conference. He has previously worked for companies such as Oracle, Genzeon, CSC, and ITG Pathfinders. Originally from the Allentown, PA area, Alvin currently resides in West Grove, PA with his wife and three daughters.
Read more about Alvin Ashcraft