I'm getting confused by await/async as I may still not get the point of its correct usage.
I have a simple WPF-UI and a ViewModel-method to start listening for clients which want to connect.
The following method is executed when the user clicks the button to start listening:
public void StartListening()
{
_tcpListener.Start(); // TcpListener
IsListening = true; // bool
Task.Factory.StartNew(DoStartListeningAsync, TaskCreationOptions.LongRunning);
}
The method DoStartListeningAsync which is called is defined like
private async Task DoStartListeningAsync()
{
while (IsListening)
{
using (var newClient = await _tcpListener.AcceptTcpClientAsync() /*.WithWaitCancellation(_cts.Token)*/)
{
apiClient = new ApiClient();
if(await apiClient.InitClientAsync()) // <-- here is the problem
{
// ... apiClient is now initialized
}
// ... do more and go back to await _tcpListener.AcceptTcpClientAsync()
}
}
}
The ApiClient class' InitClientAsync method is defined like:
public async Task<bool> InitClientAsync()
{
using (var requestStream = await _apiWebRequest.GetRequestStreamAsync())
{
_apiStreamWriter = new StreamWriter(requestStream);
}
// ... do somehing with the _apiStreamWriter
return true;
}
However, sometimes the InitClientAsync-call will get stuck at await _apiWebRequest.GetRequestStreamAsync() which then will freeze the execution of the DoStartListeningAsync-method at // <-- here is the problem.
In case the DoStartListeningAsync is stuck, no new connections will be handled which destroys my whole concept of handling multiple clients asynchronously.