Running Code
The common language runtime provides the infrastructure that enables managed execution to take place as well as a variety of services that can be used during execution. Before a method can be run, it must be compiled to processor-specific code. Each method for which Microsoft intermediate language (MSIL) has been generated is just-in-time-compiled (JIT-compiled) when it is called for the first time, and then run. The next time the method is run, the existing JIT-compiled native code is run. The process of JIT-compiling and then executing the code is repeated until execution is complete.
During execution, managed code receives services such as garbage collection, security, interoperability with unmanaged code, cross-language debugging support, and enhanced deployment and versioning support.
In Microsoft Windows XP and Windows Vista, the operating system loader checks for managed modules by examining a bit in the common object file format (COFF) header. The bit being set denotes a managed module. If the loader detects managed modules, it loads mscoree.dll, and _CorValidateImage and _CorImageUnloading notify the loader when the managed module images are loaded and unloaded. _CorValidateImage performs the following actions:
Ensures that the code is valid managed code.
Changes the entry point in the image to an entry point in the runtime.
On 64-bit Windows, _CorValidateImage modifies the image that is in memory by transforming it from PE32 to PE32+ format.
See Also
Concepts
Other Resources
Security in the .NET Framework