DEV Community

Gary Woodfine
Gary Woodfine

Posted on • Originally published at garywoodfine.com on

Singleton Design Pattern C# .net core

The Singleton pattern is grouped by the Gang Of Four in Design Patterns: Elements of Reusable Object-Oriented Software as a Creational Pattern, although to some extent it is a pattern that limits, rather than promotes, the creation of classes.

The primary objective of the Singleton Pattern, is to ensure that there is one and only one instance of a class and provides a global access point to it.

There are a number of instances in software development where one will need to ensure that there is only one instance of a class. One such example, which may be typical for enterprise software developers is to ensure there is a single point of access to a database engine.

The Singleton Pattern creates a single class responsible to create an object ensuring that only a single object gets created. This class provides a way to access its only object which can be accessed directly without the need to instantiate the object of the class.

The singleton pattern is a design pattern that restricts the instantiation of a class to one object.

The Singleton Pattern does not allow any parameters to be specified when creating the instance - as otherwise a second request for an instance but with a different parameter could be problematic!

If the same instance should be accessed for all requests with the same parameter, the Abstract factory pattern is more appropriate.

Creational Design Patterns

Implementing the Singleton Pattern

There are a number of different ways of implementing the Singleton Pattern in C#, each suited to different situations and requirements, which include Simple, Thread Safe, Lazy Loading and High Performance.

Common Characteristics of Singleton Pattern Implementations.

  1. Single Constructor - Private and Parameter-less.
  2. Sealed Class i.e. Cannot be inherited
  3. Static variable references the single created instance
  4. Public static access to the single created instance

Singleton Pattern Implementation

In our fictional implementation of the Singleton Pattern we will be using it to create Print Spooler class.

The print spooler is a software service that manages the printing process. The spooler accepts print jobs from the computer and makes sure that printer resources are available. It also schedules the order in which jobs are sent to the print queue for printing.

In the early days of personal computers, you had to wait until a document printed before you could do anything else. Thanks to modern print spoolers, the printing process has minimal impact on user productivity.

Processes and Threads

In order to understand the singleton pattern, it is important to understand the context in which it will operate. In the .Net Framework, an application will be composed of lightweight, managed sub-processes called application domains that can comprise one or more managed threads.

For the purpose of understanding the singleton pattern, let's define this as a multi-threaded application that contains one or more threads running simultaneously.

Technically, the threads are actually not running simultaneously, but this is achieved by dividing the available processor time between the threads, so that each thread will execute for a small amount of time and then the thread will suspend activity, allowing for another thread to execute.

singleton pattern, in a multi-threaded application, special care needs to be taken to ensure that access to the singleton is limited so that only one thread enters specific areas of logic at a time. Because of this synchronization of threads, it is possible for one thread to retrieve a value and update it, and, before it can be stored, another thread also updates the value.

To avoid data being updated incorrectly, restriction is required to prevent more than one thread from executing the same block of logic at the same time. There are several mechanisms supported in the .Net Framework and, in the singleton pattern.

We'll examine several Singleton Implementation patterns

GitHub logo garywoodfine / software-design-patterns

C# Design Patterns Tutorial Sample Code

Software Design Patterns in C# and .net core

In software development a Software Design Pattern is a reusable solution to commonly recurring problems. A software design pattern is a description or template used to solve a problem that can be used in many different situations.

In 1994, the so called Gang Of Four (GOF) published their book Design Patterns: Elements of Reusable Object-Oriented Software in which they presented a catalog of simple and succinct solutions to commonly occurring design problems.

The book captured 23 Patterns that enabled software architects to create flexible, elegant and ultimately reusable design patterns without having to rediscover or reinvent the design solutions for themselves.

Through a series of blog posts on garywoodfine.com I will discuss these patterns and more on how C# .net core developers can implement these patterns in cross platform .net core software solutions.

Contents

Software Design patterns are typically…

Simple Singleton Pattern

The simplest implementation of the Singleton Pattern is not thread safe, which may result in two different threads evaluate the instance value to null and actually create two instances of the object thus completely violating the core concept of the Singleton Pattern.


  // This is not recommended implementation of the Singleton Pattern
  // Just an example of the simplest implementation
  public sealed class Spooler
   {
       private static Spooler instance = null;

       private Spooler()
       {

       }

       public static Spooler Instance => instance ??= new Spooler();
   }
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

In the above example, it is possible for the instance to be created before the expression is evaluated, but the memory model doesn't guarantee that the new value of instance will be seen by other threads unless suitable memory barriers have been passed.

In the line public static Spooler Instance => instance ??= new Spooler(); We simply make use of the null-coalescing operator to check if our instance has been instantiated and if not create it or return the existing instantiated object.

In a simple single thread application model the example will work, but this is not an optimal implementation.

In the following, example we'll create an abstract class which our Singleton class will extend, to basically add some features we can reuse throughout our further examples.

We'll add a Spool class which just preforms a very rudimentary implementation of a print queue which will serve for a demo purposes.

  public abstract class Spool
  {
    public List<PrintQueueItem> Queue { get; } = new List<PrintQueueItem>();
  }
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

We will then simply inherit this class in our Singleton class

 public sealed class Spooler : Spool
   {
       private static Spooler instance = null;

       private Spooler()
       {

       }

       public static Spooler Instance => instance ??= new Spooler();

   }
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

We'll also create a really simple console application to illustrate how we would implement and use this Singleton Pattern Implementation.

    class Program
            {
                static void Main(string[] args)
                {
                    if (args == null) throw new ArgumentNullException(nameof(args));

                    for (int i = 0; i < 12; i++)
                    {
                        Spooler.Instance.Queue.Add(new PrintQueueItem{ DocumentName = $"test-document-{i}"});
                    }


                    foreach (var queueItem in Spooler.Instance.Queue)
                    {
                        Console.WriteLine(queueItem.DocumentName);
                    }
                }
            }
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

If we run a simple application we'll see that our application works as expected and there is only one instance of Spooler class and we can add values to it no problem. Interesting point to note here, is that because our Singleton class returns a reference to itself in the instance, we can then just use it in Fluent style i.e. we don't need to create a variable to reference to it.

The problem comes in when we try to use this class in a Multi-Threaded environment. Which I will try to simulate by creating a load of tasks which start a new thread and attempts to add a document to our Queue

Simple Thread Safe Singleton Implementation

We could improve the above implementation by making use of a lock on the shared object to check if the instance has been created before creating a new one.

Locking ensures that all reads occur logically after the lock is acquired while unlocking ensures all writes occur logically before the lock release. This ensures only one thread can create an instance

This pattern may address the memory barrier issues, faced with the Simple Implementation, but unfortunately has a performance impact because a lock is acquired every time the instance is requested.

     public sealed class Spooler : Spool
         {
            private static Spooler instance;
            private static readonly object threadlock = new object();


            public static Spooler Instance
            {
                get
                {
                    lock (threadlock)
                    {
                        return instance ??= new Spooler();
                    }
                }
            }
        } 

Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

Double check Lock Singleton Pattern

We could attempt the issues above by implementing a Double check Lock pattern.

This pattern is not recommended and has a number of issues.

 public sealed class Spooler : Spool
    {

            private static Spooler instance;
            private static readonly object padlock = new object();

            public static Spooler Instance
            {
                get
                {
                    if (instance == null)
                    {
                        lock (padlock)
                        {
                            if (instance == null)
                            {
                                instance = new Spooler();
                            }
                        }
                    }
                    return instance;
                }
            }
        }
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

This pattern with the help pf C# 6.0 + can be further updated by introducing the volatile keyword

The volatile keyword indicates that a field might be modified by multiple threads that are executing at the same time. The compiler, the runtime system, and even hardware may rearrange reads and writes to memory locations for performance reasons. Fields that are declared volatile are not subject to these optimizations. Adding the volatile modifier ensures that all threads will observe volatile writes performed by any other thread in the order in which they were performed. There is no guarantee of a single total ordering of volatile writes as seen from all threads of execution.

Volatile (C# Reference )

   public sealed class Spooler : Spool
    {

        private static volatile Spooler instance;
        private static readonly object threadLock = new object();

        public static Spooler Instance
        {
            get
            {
                if (instance != null) return instance;

                lock (threadLock)
                {
                    if (instance == null)
                    {
                        instance = new Spooler();
                    }
                }

                return instance;
            }
        }
    }
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

Almost Lazy Singleton Pattern

static constructors in C# execute only when an instance of the class is created or a static member is referenced, and to execute only once per AppDomain. The check for the type being newly constructed needs to be executed whatever else happens, it will be faster than adding extra checking as in the previous examples.

This approach is still not ideal and actually has some issues because if you have static members other than Instance, the first reference to those members will involve creating the instance. There are also additional complications in that if one static constructor invokes another which invokes the first again. The laziness of type initializers are only guaranteed by .NET when the type isn't marked with a special flag called beforefieldinit.

This pattern also incurs a performance hit.

 public sealed class Spooler : Spool
    {
        private static readonly Spooler instance = new Spooler();

        // Explicit static constructor to tell C# compiler
        // not to mark type as beforefieldinit
        static Spooler()
        {
        }

        private Spooler()
        {
        }

        public static Spooler Instance => instance;
    }
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

Full Lazy Implementation

In this pattern instantiation is triggered by the first reference to the static member of the nested class, which only occurs in Instance.

   public sealed class Spooler : Spool
    {

        private Spooler()
        {
        }

        public static Spooler Instance { get { return Nested.instance; } }

        private class Nested
        {
            // Explicit static constructor to tell C# compiler
            // not to mark type as beforefieldinit
            static Nested()
            {
            }

            internal static readonly Spooler instance = new Spooler();
        }

    }
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

Generic Lazy Implementation

The .net framework has some really cool features that and System.Lazy<T> is one of those features to help provide lazy initialization with access from multiple threads.

The code below implicitly uses LazyThreadSafetyMode.ExecutionAndPublication as the thread safety mode for the Lazy<Spooler>.

simpler way to achieve laziness, using .NET 4 +, in my opinion tt also has the advantage that it's obviously lazy and it is clearly and implicitly stated in the code.

 public sealed class Spooler : Spool
 {
    private static readonly Lazy<Spooler>
            lazy =
                new Lazy<Spooler>
                    (() => new Spooler());

    public static Spooler Instance { get { return lazy.Value; } }

    private Spooler(){}

  }
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

Example Scenarios for Singleton Classes

Singleton classes are typically used in applications to create utility classes. A utility classes typically have the following characteristics

  • Have no state of its own
  • All the methods can be class methods (static) rather than object methods
  • Provide methods for multiple other classes i.e. Common or shared code

Other common usages for Singleton classes could be:

  • Service Proxies: invoking a service or API is an expensive operation. Creating Service proxy as a Singleton this overhead can be reduced.
  • Facades: Database connections are another example where Singleton can be used to improve performance and synchronisation. Logging: I/O is resource consuming operation, having a single instance of a Logger, data can be persisted to log files.
  • Data sharing: Configuration values and constant values can be kept in Singleton to read by other components of the application.
  • Caching: Data fetching is a time consuming process whereas caching required data in the application memory avoids DB calls and Singleton can be used to handle the caching with thread synchronisation.

The Singleton Pattern should only be used when necessary as it can introduce a potential bottleneck for the application. Sometimes, the pattern may be viewed as an anti-pattern because it could introduce Global State.

Global state, unknown dependencies within an application are introduced and it then becomes unclear as to how many types might depend on the information. Additionally, many frameworks and repositories already limit access when required, so introducing an additional mechanism might limit the performance unnecessarily.

Top comments (0)