We have a 3rd party application that writes a file to a directory and then deletes it. We want to copy that file before it is deleted.
We have this:
FileSystemWatcher watcher;
private void WatchForFileDrop()
{
watcher = new FileSystemWatcher();
watcher.Path = "c:\\FileDrop";
watcher.NotifyFilter = NotifyFilters.LastAccess | NotifyFilters.LastWrite | NotifyFilters.FileName;
watcher.Filter = "*.txt";
watcher.Created += new FileSystemEventHandler(OnCreated);
watcher.EnableRaisingEvents = true;
}
private void OnCreated(object source, FileSystemEventArgs e)
{
//Copy the file to the file drop location
System.IO.File.Copy(e.FullPath, "C:\\FileDropCopy\\" + e.Name);
}
The FileSystemWatcher does work. It will see that the file has been created and it goes to the OnCreated(). The file is created in the directory.
The only problem is the file is empty and the file size is 0kb.
I wanted to double check my thinking of why the file is empty. Is it because the file is deleted so quickly by the 3rd party application that it doesn't have the chance to do a proper copy? thanks for taking a look.
FileSystemWatcher
to ensure that you have an opportunity to access the file after it is written and closed, but before it is deleted.