Is there a way in C# or .net IL to force a class that has a type initializer (static constructor) to load itself, without accessing any of its parameters?
Assuming I've got the class
public static class LogInitialization {
static LogInitialization() {
System.Console.WriteLine("Initialized");
}
}
Is there a way to get this line to print?
Note that the class is static so I can't instantiate it to force initialization, and it has no public members so I can't access them to start it.
Rummaging in the CLI spec, I found a reference to the method RuntimeHelpers.RunClassConstructor
If a language wishes to provide more rigid behavior — e.g., type initialization automatically triggers execution of base class’s initializers, in a top-to-bottom order — then it can do so by either:
- defining hidden static fields and code in each class constructor that touches the hidden static field of its base class and/or interfaces it implements, or
- by making explicit calls to
System.Runtime.CompilerServices.RuntimeHelpers.RunClassConstructor
(see Partition IV).
I usually create a dummy (empty) Init method on classes with static constructors to force the static constructor execution. ie.
public static void Initialize()
{
// this will force your static constructor to execute, obviously
}
That said, you can always go for the Type.TypeInitializer with reflection... http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/system.type.typeinitializer.aspx
EDIT: One other thing I've done in the past, is to create an attribute called RequiresInitializationAttribute then on AssemblyLoad scan the assembly for types with such an attribute and using the type.TypeInitializer to force the static constructor to execute when the containing assembly is loaded.
I guess the real question, as usual, is...what are you trying to accomplish?
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/4181582/forcing-class-load