I have an helper class created that works at least for the WebDevServer, I assume it works for IIS as well. What this does is it Register a helper with the hostingenvironment which ends up calling Stop when the host is nicely taken down. Remember that in case of an uncontrolled process exit no threads will run anymore so this method is also not being called.
Usage
protected void Button1_Click(object sender, EventArgs e)
{
var hlp = Myhelper.Create();
var arguments = new object[] { "foo", 42 };
ThreadPool.QueueUserWorkItem(hlp.FooBar, arguments);
}
Helper
public class Myhelper:IRegisteredObject
{
private Myhelper(){}
// factory
public static Myhelper Create()
{
var hlp = new Myhelper();
HostingEnvironment.RegisterObject(hlp); // register ourself!
return hlp;
}
bool keepRunning = true;
ManualResetEvent mre = new ManualResetEvent(false);
ManualResetEvent stopped = new ManualResetEvent(false);
// our DoWork method!
public void FooBar(object args)
{
EventLog.WriteEntry(".NET Runtime", "started");
// implement your long running function,
// be sure to check regularly if you need to stop processing
while (keepRunning)
{
Trace.Write("+");
mre.WaitOne(1000); // do work, (used this instead of Thread.Sleep())
}
EventLog.WriteEntry(".NET Runtime","stopped");
HostingEnvironment.UnregisterObject(this);
stopped.Set(); // we are done!
}
// this gets caled when the HostingEnvironment is stopping
public void Stop(bool immediate)
{
keepRunning = false;
mre.Set(); // signal nicely
stopped.WaitOne(200); // wait max 200 ms before returning to prevent getting stuck
}
}