In Async Void, ASP.Net, and Count of Outstanding Operations, Stephan Cleary explains the root of this error:
Historically, ASP.NET has supported clean asynchronous operations
since .NET 2.0 via the Event-based Asynchronous Pattern (EAP), in
which asynchronous components notify the SynchronizationContext of
their starting and completing.
What is happening is that you're firing DownloadAsync
inside your class constructor, where inside you await
on the async http call. This registers the asynchronous operation with the ASP.NET SynchronizationContext
. When your HomeController
returns, it sees that it has a pending asynchronous operation which has yet to complete, and that is why it raises an exception.
If we remove task = DownloadAsync(); from the constructor and put it
into the Index method it will work fine without the errors.
As I explained above, that's because you no longer have a pending asynchronous operation going on while returning from the controller.
If we use another DownloadAsync() body return await
Task.Factory.StartNew(() => { Thread.Sleep(3000); return "Give me an
error"; });
it will work properly.
That's because Task.Factory.StartNew
does something dangerous in ASP.NET. It doesn't register the tasks execution with ASP.NET. This can lead to edge cases where a pool recycle executes, ignoring your background task completely, causing an abnormal abort. That is why you have to use a mechanism which registers the task, such as HostingEnvironment.QueueBackgroundWorkItem
.
That's why it isn't possible to do what you're doing, the way you're doing it. If you really want this to execute in a background thread, in a "fire-and-forget" style, use either HostingEnvironment
(if you're on .NET 4.5.2) or BackgroundTaskManager
. Note that by doing this, you're using a threadpool thread to do async IO operations, which is redundant and exactly what async IO with async-await
attempts to overcome.
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