When I run code analysis on the following chunk of code I get this message:
Object 'stream' can be disposed more than once in method 'upload.Page_Load(object, EventArgs)'. To avoid generating a System.ObjectDisposedException you should not call Dispose more than one time on an object.
using(var stream = File.Open(newFilename, FileMode.CreateNew))
using(var reader = new BinaryReader(file.InputStream))
using(var writer = new BinaryWriter(stream))
{
var chunk = new byte[ChunkSize];
Int32 count;
while((count = reader.Read(chunk, 0, ChunkSize)) > 0)
{
writer.Write(chunk, 0, count);
}
}
I don't understand why it might be called twice, and how to fix it to eliminate the error. Any help?
I struggled with this problem and found the example here to be very helpful. I'll post the code for a quick view:
using (Stream stream = new FileStream("file.txt", FileMode.OpenOrCreate))
{
using (StreamWriter writer = new StreamWriter(stream))
{
// Use the writer object...
}
}
Replace the outer using statement with a try/finally making sure to BOTH null the stream after using it in StreamWriter AND check to make sure it is not null in the finally before disposing.
Stream stream = null;
try
{
stream = new FileStream("file.txt", FileMode.OpenOrCreate);
using (StreamWriter writer = new StreamWriter(stream))
{
stream = null;
// Use the writer object...
}
}
finally
{
if(stream != null)
stream.Dispose();
}
Doing this cleared up my errors.
To illustrate, let's edit your code
using(var stream = File.Open(newFilename, FileMode.CreateNew))
{
using(var reader = new BinaryReader(file.InputStream))
{
using(var writer = new BinaryWriter(stream))
{
var chunk = new byte[ChunkSize];
Int32 count;
while((count = reader.Read(chunk, 0, ChunkSize)) > 0)
{
writer.Write(chunk, 0, count);
}
} // here we dispose of writer, which disposes of stream
} // here we dispose of reader
} // here we dispose a stream, which was already disposed of by writer
To avoid this, just create the writer directly
using(var reader = new BinaryReader(file.InputStream))
{
using(var writer = new BinaryWriter( File.Open(newFilename, FileMode.CreateNew)))
{
var chunk = new byte[ChunkSize];
Int32 count;
while((count = reader.Read(chunk, 0, ChunkSize)) > 0)
{
writer.Write(chunk, 0, count);
}
} // here we dispose of writer, which disposes of its inner stream
} // here we dispose of reader
edit
: to take into account what Eric Lippert is saying, there could indeed be a moment when the stream is only released by the finalizer if BinaryWriter throws an exception. According to the BinaryWriter code, that could occur in three cases
If (output Is Nothing) Then
Throw New ArgumentNullException("output")
End If
If (encoding Is Nothing) Then
Throw New ArgumentNullException("encoding")
End If
If Not output.CanWrite Then
Throw New ArgumentException(Environment.GetResourceString("Argument_StreamNotWritable"))
End If
- if you didn't specify an output, ie if stream is null. That shouldn't be a problem since a null stream means no resources to dispose of :)
- if you didn't specify an encoding. since we don't use the constructor form where the encoding is specified, there should be no problem here either (i didn't look into the encoding contructor too much, but an invalid codepage can throw)
- if you don't pass a writable stream. That should be caught quite quickly during development...
Anyway, good point, hence the edit :)
The BinaryReader/BinaryWriter will dispose the underlying stream for you when it disposes. You don't need to do it explicitly.
To fix it you can remove the using around the Stream itself.
Your writer will dispose your stream, always.
A proper implementation of Dispose is explicitly required not to care if it's been called more than once on the same object. While multiple calls to Dispose are sometimes indicative of logic problems or code which could be better written, the only way I would improve the original posted code would be to convince Microsoft to add an option to BinaryReader and BinaryWriter instructing them not to dispose their passed-in stream (and then use that option). Otherwise, the code required to ensure the file gets closed even if the reader or writer throws in its constructor would be sufficiently ugly that simply letting the file get disposed more than once would seem cleaner.