How does TransactionScope work?

Eduardo picture Eduardo · Aug 5, 2010 · Viewed 14.9k times · Source

When Method1() instantiates a TransactionScope and calls Method2() that also instantiates a TransactionScope, how does .NET know both are in the same scope? I believe it doesn't use static methods internally otherwise it wouldn't work well on multithreaded applications like ASP.NET.

Is it possible to create my own TransactionScope-like class or does the original one use special features those just Microsoft knows how they work?

Answer

Jordão picture Jordão · Aug 7, 2010

Hope this helps:

http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/magazine/cc300805.aspx

For those unfamiliar with TransactionScope, it is part of the System.Transactions namespace new to the Microsoft® .NET Framework 2.0. System.Transactions provides a transactions framework fully integrated into the .NET Framework, including but not limited to ADO.NET. The Transaction and TransactionScope classes are two of the most important classes in this namespace. As the question alludes to, you can create a TransactionScope instance, and ADO.NET operations executed within the scope of that TransactionScope will be enlisted automatically (you can also access the current Transaction through the Transaction.Current static property):

using(TransactionScope scope = new TransactionScope())
{
    ... // all operations here part of a transaction
    scope.Complete();
}