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I need to detect when Windows is shutdown (or restarted) or when the user is logging off. I need to properly close the application before the application is closed. I noticed that no exit application event is raised when Windows is closing day.

I read the post Is there a way in c# to detect a Windows shutdown/logoff and cancel that action (after asking the user)

but I'm not sure of where I should perform the operations before closing. Thanks.

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3 Answers 3

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Attach an event handler method to the SystemEvents.SessionEnding event, and your handler method will be called each time the event is raised. Handling this event will allow you to cancel the pending log off or shut down, if you wish. (Although that doesn't actually work like it sounds in current operating systems; for more information see the MSDN documentation here.)

If you don't want to cancel the event, but just react to it appropriately, you should handle the SystemEvents.SessionEnded event instead.

You must make sure that you detach your event handlers when the application is closed, however, because both of these are static events.

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  • 3
    This thread is probably dead now, but what happens if your application starts AFTER shutdown has already started. Will both of those events still work since technically you missed it already. This is the kind of problem I'm having now. My application is designed to stay running, and on shutdown it tries to restart after its been killed by windows in preparation for shutting down. Feb 19, 2013 at 18:34
  • 3
    @Ultratrunks You're fighting a losing battle here. An application cannot reliably prevent system shutdown, all it can do is react to it. Apr 16, 2013 at 3:51
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    @CodyGray Per my comment, I'm not looking for anything that prevents shutting down. I just want to know about it. Actually, I'm inadvertently preventing shutdown right now because my application tries to start after the shutdown process has started, and it immediately crashes and leaves a window up on the screen that prevents shutdown from occurring. Its a nuisance so i want to be able to query the system and ask "are you in the middle of shutting down?" so I can act accordingly. Apr 16, 2013 at 16:07
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    Can you elaborate on why you need to unattach the event? Your application is closing. Nothing managed will leak. Will unmanaged memory to kept open?
    – Gusdor
    Oct 14, 2013 at 7:20
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    Is there a way to test these events without actually turn off or logoff?
    – JobaDiniz
    May 6, 2016 at 11:51
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You can use a native solution via pinvoke if your code is not running in a non-interactive session (such as a system service):

//SM_SHUTTINGDOWN = 0x2000
bool bShutDownPending = GetSystemMetrics(SM_SHUTTINGDOWN) != 0;
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    Keeping in mind, of course, that this is a polling solution - no callback, no event handling - you have to check until this condition is satisfied. May 2, 2015 at 16:09
  • how to use it in C#? I only find in C++
    – underfilho
    Mar 20, 2018 at 0:07
  • @MahmoudAl-Qudsi: Sure. It just adds a little bit more work. Simply create a worker thread that polls in a loop for that value and sets a locked global boolean variable with the result, or invokes your custom event handler. The important part is to ensure that it doesn't "eat up" too many CPU cycles. For that simply put a Sleep(10); call in each cycle. Additionally you may implement a stop event to be able to exit that thread.
    – c00000fd
    Mar 20, 2018 at 2:47
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    Since there's an asynchronous event-driven solution, you shouldn't need to waste system resources with a separate thread and a CPU loop. Mar 20, 2018 at 19:01
  • @MahmoudAl-Qudsi: did you see my explanation? If implemented as I suggested there's no "waste of system resources" that can be significant for any measure, esp. for a .NET application. It's been a while and I can't find my exact application, but the reason I offered the workaround above is for the situation when .NET's SystemEvents.SessionEnded was not available. Otherwise obviously use it. Additionally you might want to know if the user is logging off right-at-that-moment, say, when implementing another event. In that case this solution is more robust and no polling is needed at all.
    – c00000fd
    Mar 20, 2018 at 20:44
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Now you should use something like this:

private static int WM_QUERYENDSESSION = 0x11;
protected override void WndProc(ref System.Windows.Forms.Message m)
{
    if (m.Msg==WM_QUERYENDSESSION)
    {
        MessageBox.Show("queryendsession: this is a logoff, shutdown, or reboot");
    }
    
    base.WndProc(ref m);
}

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