File.ReadLines without locking it?

Felipe Fujiy Pessoto picture Felipe Fujiy Pessoto · Mar 17, 2011 · Viewed 16k times · Source

I can open a FileStream with

new FileStream(logfileName, FileMode.Open, FileAccess.Read, FileShare.ReadWrite);

Without locking the file.

I can do the same with File.ReadLines(string path)?

Answer

xanatos picture xanatos · Mar 17, 2011

No... If you look with Reflector you'll see that in the end File.ReadLines opens a FileStream(path, FileMode.Open, FileAccess.Read, FileShare.Read, 0x1000, FileOptions.SequentialScan);

So Read-only share.

(it technically opens a StreamReader with the FileStream as described above)

I'll add that it seems to be child's play to make a static method to do it:

public static IEnumerable<string> ReadLines(string path)
{
    using (var fs = new FileStream(path, FileMode.Open, FileAccess.Read, FileShare.ReadWrite, 0x1000, FileOptions.SequentialScan))
    using (var sr = new StreamReader(fs, Encoding.UTF8))
    {
        string line;
        while ((line = sr.ReadLine()) != null)
        {
            yield return line;
        }
    }
}

This returns an IEnumerable<string> (something better if the file has many thousand of lines and you only need to parse them one at a time). If you need an array, call it as ReadLines("myfile").ToArray() using LINQ.

Please be aware that, logically, if the file changes "behind its back (of the method)", how will everything work is quite undefined (it IS probably technically defined, but the definition is probably quite long and complex)