Exemple #1
0
        private IDisposable ScheduledSubscribe(IScheduler _, AutoDetachObserver <T> autoDetachObserver)
        {
            try
            {
                autoDetachObserver.SetResource(SubscribeCore(autoDetachObserver));
            }
            catch (Exception exception)
            {
                //
                // This can happen when there's a synchronous callback to OnError in the
                // implementation of SubscribeCore, which also throws. So, we're seeing
                // an exception being thrown from a handler.
                //
                // For compat with v1.x, we rethrow the exception in this case, keeping
                // in mind this should be rare but if it happens, something's totally
                // screwed up.
                //
                if (!autoDetachObserver.Fail(exception))
                {
                    throw;
                }
            }

            return(Disposable.Empty);
        }
Exemple #2
0
        /// <summary>
        /// Subscribes the given observer to the observable sequence.
        /// </summary>
        /// <param name="observer">Observer that will receive notifications from the observable sequence.</param>
        /// <returns>Disposable object representing an observer's subscription to the observable sequence.</returns>
        /// <exception cref="ArgumentNullException"><paramref name="observer"/> is <c>null</c>.</exception>
        public IDisposable Subscribe(IObserver <T> observer)
        {
            if (observer == null)
            {
                throw new ArgumentNullException(nameof(observer));
            }

            var autoDetachObserver = new AutoDetachObserver <T>(observer);

            if (CurrentThreadScheduler.IsScheduleRequired)
            {
                //
                // Notice we don't protect this piece of code using an exception handler to
                // redirect errors to the OnError channel. This call to Schedule will run the
                // trampoline, so we'd be catching all exceptions, including those from user
                // callbacks that happen to run there. For example, consider:
                //
                //    Observable.Return(42, Scheduler.CurrentThread)
                //              .Subscribe(x => { throw new Exception(); });
                //
                // Here, the OnNext(42) call would be scheduled on the trampoline, so when we
                // return from the scheduled Subscribe call, the CurrentThreadScheduler moves
                // on to invoking this work item. Too much of protection here would cause the
                // exception thrown in OnNext to circle back to OnError, which looks like the
                // sequence can't make up its mind.
                //
                CurrentThreadScheduler.Instance.Schedule(autoDetachObserver, ScheduledSubscribe);
            }
            else
            {
                try
                {
                    autoDetachObserver.SetResource(SubscribeCore(autoDetachObserver));
                }
                catch (Exception exception)
                {
                    //
                    // This can happen when there's a synchronous callback to OnError in the
                    // implementation of SubscribeCore, which also throws. So, we're seeing
                    // an exception being thrown from a handler.
                    //
                    // For compat with v1.x, we rethrow the exception in this case, keeping
                    // in mind this should be rare but if it happens, something's totally
                    // screwed up.
                    //
                    if (!autoDetachObserver.Fail(exception))
                    {
                        throw;
                    }
                }
            }

            return(autoDetachObserver);
        }