Core.Scripting-008 resolution: replace the legacy CSharpScript.CreateDelegate
path with hand-rolled CSharpCompilation + Emit + collectible AssemblyLoadContext,
so per-publish compile accretion no longer requires a server restart to reclaim.
Why this was needed:
Roslyn's CSharpScript path emits dynamically-compiled script assemblies into
the default AssemblyLoadContext, which is non-collectible. Across config-
publish generations each Clear() drops dictionary entries but the emitted
assemblies stay loaded for process lifetime, so memory grows steadily on
long-running servers with frequent publishes. The accepted-limitation note
in docs/VirtualTags.md recommended scheduled restarts as the workaround;
operator feedback was that restarts are difficult, so the underlying
limitation was the right thing to fix.
Implementation:
- New ScriptAssemblyLoadContext(name, isCollectible: true) hosts one emitted
script assembly per evaluator.
- ScriptEvaluator.Compile synthesises a wrapper class around the user source
(CompiledScript.Run(globals) — explicit return required per ordinary C#
semantics, which every existing script already uses), builds a
CSharpCompilation against the sandbox references, runs the
ForbiddenTypeAnalyzer over the semantic model unchanged, emits to an
in-memory PE stream, loads via ScriptAssemblyLoadContext.LoadFromStream,
and binds a strongly-typed Func<ScriptGlobals<TContext>, TResult> delegate
via reflection.
- ScriptEvaluator now implements IDisposable — Dispose calls
AssemblyLoadContext.Unload(), which makes the emitted assembly eligible
for GC at the next collection cycle.
- CompiledScriptCache.Clear() disposes every materialised evaluator before
dropping its dictionary entry; CompiledScriptCache itself is now
IDisposable for graceful server shutdown.
- ScriptSandbox.Build returns a new SandboxConfig (References + Imports)
instead of a Roslyn ScriptOptions; references now span BCL via the
TRUSTED_PLATFORM_ASSEMBLIES set filtered to System.* + netstandard +
Microsoft.Win32.Registry, so forbidden BCL types resolve at compile and
ForbiddenTypeAnalyzer is the sole security gate (consistent with the
Core.Scripting-001 / -002 model — references-list-only restriction is
porous against type forwarding, so the analyzer must be the real gate).
Verification:
- All 104 Core.Scripting tests pass (was 101 — three new regression tests
locking the unload contract).
- All 56 VirtualTags tests pass (unchanged).
- All 63 ScriptedAlarms tests pass (unchanged).
- New CompiledScriptCacheTests:
- Dispose_unloads_compiled_script_assembly_load_context — proves single-
evaluator ALC unload via WeakReference + bounded GC.Collect() loop.
- Clear_disposes_every_materialised_evaluator — proves publish-replace
releases every prior generation's ALC.
- GetOrCompile_after_Dispose_throws_ObjectDisposedException — locks the
post-dispose contract.
Docs:
- docs/VirtualTags.md "Compile cache" section rewritten: the accepted-
limitation note replaced with the unload contract + the new authoring
convention (explicit return).
- docs/ScriptedAlarms.md cross-reference updated to drop the obsolete
restart guidance.
- code-reviews/Core.Scripting/findings.md Core.Scripting-008 flipped
Won't Fix → Resolved with the implementation summary.
- code-reviews/README.md regenerated.
Pre-existing breakage note: Driver.Galaxy fails the solution-wide build on
master because its ProjectReference to the sibling mxaccessgw repo's
MxGateway.Client targets a path that the sibling repo no longer has after a
recent restructuring. This is unrelated to Core.Scripting-008 and was
verified to exist on master before this branch was cut.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>