| name | assume-isolated |
| description | Use when needing synchronous actor access in tests, legacy delegate callbacks, or performance-critical code. Covers MainActor.assumeIsolated, @preconcurrency protocol conformances, crash behavior, Task vs assumeIsolated. |
| skill_type | discipline |
| version | 1.0.0 |
assumeIsolated — Synchronous Actor Access
Synchronously access actor-isolated state when you know you're already on the correct isolation domain.
When to Use
✅ Use when:
- Testing MainActor code synchronously (avoiding Task overhead)
- Legacy delegate callbacks documented to run on main thread
- Performance-critical code avoiding async hop overhead
- Protocol conformances where callbacks are guaranteed on specific actor
❌ Don't use when:
- Uncertain about current isolation (use
awaitinstead) - Already in async context (you have isolation)
- Cross-actor calls needed (use async)
- Callback origin is unknown or untrusted
API Reference
MainActor.assumeIsolated
static func assumeIsolated<T>(
_ operation: @MainActor () throws -> T,
file: StaticString = #fileID,
line: UInt = #line
) rethrows -> T where T: Sendable
Behavior: Executes synchronously. Crashes if not on MainActor's serial executor.
Custom Actor assumeIsolated
func assumeIsolated<T>(
_ operation: (isolated Self) throws -> T,
file: StaticString = #fileID,
line: UInt = #line
) rethrows -> T where T: Sendable
Task vs assumeIsolated
| Aspect | Task { @MainActor in } |
MainActor.assumeIsolated |
|---|---|---|
| Timing | Deferred (next run loop) | Synchronous (inline) |
| Async support | Yes (can await) | No (sync only) |
| Context | From any context | Must be sync function |
| Failure mode | Runs anyway | Crashes if wrong isolation |
| Use case | Start async work | Verify + access isolated state |
Patterns
Pattern 1: Testing MainActor Code
@Test func viewModelUpdates() {
MainActor.assumeIsolated {
let vm = ViewModel()
vm.update()
#expect(vm.state == .updated)
}
}
Pattern 2: Legacy Delegate Callbacks
From WWDC 2024-10169 — When documentation guarantees main thread delivery:
@MainActor
class LocationDelegate: NSObject, CLLocationManagerDelegate {
var location: CLLocation?
// CLLocationManager created on main thread delivers callbacks on main thread
nonisolated func locationManager(
_ manager: CLLocationManager,
didUpdateLocations locations: [CLLocation]
) {
MainActor.assumeIsolated {
self.location = locations.last
}
}
}
Pattern 3: @preconcurrency Shorthand
@preconcurrency is equivalent shorthand — wraps in assumeIsolated automatically:
// ❌ Manual approach (verbose)
extension MyClass: SomeDelegate {
nonisolated func callback() {
MainActor.assumeIsolated {
self.updateUI()
}
}
}
// ✅ Using @preconcurrency (equivalent, cleaner)
extension MyClass: @preconcurrency SomeDelegate {
func callback() {
self.updateUI() // Compiler wraps in assumeIsolated
}
}
When protocol adds isolation: @preconcurrency becomes unnecessary and compiler warns.
Pattern 4: Thread Check Before assumeIsolated
When caller context is unknown (e.g., library code):
func getView() -> UIView {
if Thread.isMainThread {
return createHostingViewOnMain()
} else {
return DispatchQueue.main.sync {
createHostingViewOnMain()
}
}
}
private func createHostingViewOnMain() -> UIView {
MainActor.assumeIsolated {
let hosting = UIHostingController(rootView: MyView())
return hosting.view
}
}
Pattern 5: Custom Actor Access
actor DataStore {
var cache: [String: Data] = [:]
nonisolated func synchronousRead(key: String) -> Data? {
// Only safe if called from DataStore's executor
assumeIsolated { isolated in
isolated.cache[key]
}
}
}
Common Mistakes
Mistake 1: Silencing Compiler Errors
// ❌ DANGEROUS: Using assumeIsolated to silence warnings
func unknownContext() {
MainActor.assumeIsolated {
updateUI() // Crashes if not actually on main actor!
}
}
// ✅ When uncertain, use proper async
func unknownContext() async {
await MainActor.run {
updateUI()
}
}
Mistake 2: Assuming GCD Main Queue == MainActor
They're usually the same, but not guaranteed. Check documentation or use async.
Mistake 3: Using in Async Context
// ❌ Unnecessary — you already have isolation
@MainActor
func updateState() async {
MainActor.assumeIsolated { // Pointless
self.state = .ready
}
}
// ✅ Direct access
@MainActor
func updateState() async {
self.state = .ready
}
When @preconcurrency Becomes Unnecessary
If the protocol later adds MainActor isolation:
// Library update:
@MainActor
protocol CaffeineThresholdDelegate: AnyObject {
func caffeineLevel(at level: Double)
}
// Your code — @preconcurrency now warns:
// "@preconcurrency attribute on conformance has no effect"
extension Recaffeinater: CaffeineThresholdDelegate {
func caffeineLevel(at level: Double) {
// Direct access, no wrapper needed
}
}
Crash Behavior
Per Apple documentation:
"If the current context is not running on the actor's serial executor... this method will crash with a fatal error."
Trapping is intentional: Better to crash than corrupt user data with a race condition.
Resources
WWDC: 2024-10169
Docs: /swift/mainactor/assumeisolated, /swift/actor/assumeisolated
Skills: swift-concurrency