Consider the following code:
class Program
{
static void Main(string[] args)
{
A a = new A();
CreateB(a);
GC.Collect();
GC.WaitForPendingFinalizers();
Console.WriteLine("And here's:" + a);
GC.KeepAlive(a);
}
private static void CreateB(A a)
{
B b = new B(a);
}
}
class A
{ }
class B
{
private WeakReference a;
public B(A a)
{
this.a = new WeakRefe开发者_开发技巧rence(a);
}
~B()
{
Console.WriteLine("a.IsAlive: " + a.IsAlive);
Console.WriteLine("a.Target: " + a.Target);
}
}
With the following output:
a.IsAlive: False
a.Target:
And here's:ConsoleApp.A
Why is it false and null? A hasn't been collected yet.
EDIT: Oh ye of little faith.
I added the following lines:
Console.WriteLine("And here's:" + a);
GC.KeepAlive(a);
See the updated output.
Updated answer for updated question.
With the new question, we go through the following steps.
- A and B alive and rooted, B.a alive and rooted via B.
- A alive, B not rooted and eligible for collection. B.a not rooted and eligible.
- Collection happens. B and B.a are each finalisable, so they are put on the finaliser queue. B is not collected because it is finalisable. B.a is not collected, both because it is finalisable, and because it is referenced by B which has not yet been finalised.
- Either B.a is finalised, or B is finalised.
- The other of B.a or B is finalised.
- B.a and B are eligibled for for collection.
(If B was finalised at point 4 it would be possible for it to be collected before point 5, as while B awaiting finalisation keeps both B and B.a from collection, B.a awaiting finalisation does not affect B's collection).
What has happened is that the order between 4 and 5 was such that B.a was finalised and then B was finalised. Since the reference a WeakReference holds to an object is not a normal reference, it needs its own clean-up code to release its GCHandle. Obviously it can't depend on normal GC collection behaviour, since the whole point of its references is that they don't follow normal GC collection behaviour.
Now B's finaliser is run, but since the behaviour of B.a's finaliser was to release its reference it returns false for IsAlive (or in .NET prior to 1.1 if I'm remembering the versions right, throws an error).
The key problem in this is that you are accessing a reference field during a finalizer. The underlying problem is that the WeakReference
itself has (or can be, unpredictably) already been collected (since collection order is non-deterministic). Simply: the WeakReference
no longer exists, and you are query IsValid
/ Target
etc on a ghost object.
So accessing this object at all is unreliable and brittle. Finalizers should only talk to direct value-type state - handles, etc. Any reference (unless you know it will always out-live the object being destroyed) should be treated with distrust and avoided.
If instead, we pass in the WeakReference
and ensure that the WeakReference
is not collected, then everything works fine; the following should show one success (the one where we've passed in the WeakReference
), and one fail (where we've created the WeakReference
just for this object, thus it is eligible for collection at the same time as the object):
using System;
class Program
{
static void Main(string[] args)
{
A a = new A();
CreateB(a);
WeakReference weakRef = new WeakReference(a);
CreateB(weakRef);
GC.Collect();
GC.WaitForPendingFinalizers();
GC.KeepAlive(a);
GC.KeepAlive(weakRef);
Console.ReadKey();
}
private static void CreateB(A a)
{
B b = new B(a);
}
private static void CreateB(WeakReference a)
{
B b = new B(a);
}
}
class A
{ }
class B
{
private WeakReference a;
public B(WeakReference a)
{
this.a = a;
}
public B(A a)
{
this.a = new WeakReference(a);
}
~B()
{
Console.WriteLine("a.IsAlive: " + a.IsAlive);
Console.WriteLine("a.Target: " + a.Target);
}
}
What makes you say it isn't collected? It looks eligible.... no field on a live object holds it, and the variable is never read past that point (and indeed that variable may well have been optimised away by the compiler, so no "local" in the IL).
You might need a GC.KeepAlive(a)
at the bottom of Main
to stop it.
This is indeed a bit odd and I can't say, that I have the answer, but here's what I have found so far. Given your example, I attached WinDbg immediately before the call to GC.Collect
. At this point the weak reference holds on to the instance as expected.
Following that I dug out the actual instance of WeakReference
and set a data breakpoint on the reference itself. Proceeding from this point the debugger breaks at mscorwks!WKS::FreeWeakHandle+0x12
(which sets the handle to null) and the managed call stack is as follows:
OS Thread Id: 0xf54 (0)
ESP EIP
0045ed28 6eb182d3 [HelperMethodFrame: 0045ed28] System.GC.nativeCollectGeneration(Int32, Int32)
0045ed80 00af0c62 System.GC.Collect()
0045ed84 005e819d app.Program.Main(System.String[])
0045efac 6eab1b5c [GCFrame: 0045efac]
This seems to indicate, that the call to GC.Collect
in turn ends up modifying the weak reference as well. This would explain the observed behavior, but I can't say if this is how it will behave in all cases.
Why is it false and null? A hasn't been collected yet.
You don't know that for sure. The GC can collect it as soon as it's no longer needed - which, in this case, is right after it gets stuffed into the WeakReference.
Incidentally, Raymond Chen had a blog post recently about this very topic.
The garbage collector has determined that a
is dead because it is not referred anymore after GC.collect(). If you change the code to:
GC.Collect();
GC.WaitForPendingFinalizers();
System.Console.WriteLine("And here's:"+a);
You will find a
alive during the finalization of B.
Even though WeakReference
does not implement IDisposable
, it does use an unmanaged resource (a GCHandle
). When a WeakReference
is abandoned, it must make certain that resource gets released before the WeakReference
itself gets garbage-collected; if it did not, the system would have no way of knowing that the GCHandle
was no longer needed. To deal with this, a WeakReference
release its GCHandle
(thus invalidating itself) in its Finalize
method. If this happens before the execution of a Finalize
method that attempts to use the WeakReference
, the latter method will have no way of getting the WeakReference
's former target.
The constructor for WeakReference
accepts a parameter which indicates whether its target should be invalidated as soon as its target becomes eligible for immediate finalization (parameter value false
), or only when its target becomes eligible for annihilation (parameter value true
). I'm not sure whether that parameter will cause the WeakReference
itself to be resurrected for one GC cycle, but that might be a possibility.
Otherwise, if you are using .net 4.0, there is a class called ConditionalWeakTable
that might be helpful; it allows the lifetimes of various objects to be linked. You could have a finalizable object which holds a strong reference to the object to which you want a weak reference, and have the only reference to that finalizable object be stored in a ConditionalWeakTable
, keyed by the object to which the weak reference is desired. The latter object (the Value
of the ConditionalWeakTable entry) will become eligible for finalization when its corresponding
Key` does; it could then do something suitable with the strong reference it holds.
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