I have an EventHandler
on a custom Control
, which is called from a background thread and invalidates the control. To do this, I use Invoke
as follows:
void Foo::handleProgressChanged(Object^ sender, EventArgs^ args)
{
if (InvokeRequired)
{
Invoke(gcnew EventHandler(this, &Foo::handleProgressChanged), sender, args);
return;
}
this->UpdateProgress();
this->Invalidate(true);
}
Under some rare conditions the call to Invoke
causes a deadlock although the message loop should be pumping. The callstack of the main thread is:
ntdll.dll!770c5ca4()
[Frames below may be incorrect and/or missing, no symbols loaded for ntdll.dll]
user32.dll!75e6073f()
System.Windows.Forms.dll!System.Windows.Forms.Application.ComponentManager.System.Windows.Forms.UnsafeNativeMethods.IMsoComponentManager.FPushMessageLoop(int dwComponentID, int reason = -1, int pvLoopData = 0) + 0x3c8 bytes
System.Windows.Forms.dll!System.Windows.Forms.Application.ThreadContext.RunMessageLoopInner(int reason = -1, System.Windows.Forms.ApplicationContext context = {Microsoft.VisualBasic.ApplicationServices.WindowsFormsApplicationBase.WinFormsAppContext}) + 0x177 bytes
System.Windows.Forms.dll!System.Windows.Forms.Application.ThreadContext.RunMessageLoop(int reason, System.Windows.Forms.ApplicationContext context) + 0x61 bytes
System.Windows.Forms.dll!System.Windows.Forms.Application.Run(System.Windows.Forms.ApplicationContext context) + 0x18 bytes
Microsoft.VisualBasic.dll!Microsoft.VisualBasic.ApplicationServices.WindowsFormsApplicationBase.OnRun() Line 768 + 0x9 bytes Basic
Microsoft.VisualBasic.dll!Microsoft.VisualBasic.ApplicationServices.WindowsFormsApplicationBase.DoApplicationModel() Line 1444 Basic
Microsoft.VisualBasic.dll!Microsoft.VisualBasic.ApplicationServices.WindowsFormsApplicationBase.Run(String() commandLine = Nothing) Line 491 + 0x7 bytes Basic
...
I tried to switch to BeginInvoke
, but the passed delegate was never executed. I found a workaround that is far from optimal and that I regard as an evil hack: If I call BeginInvoke
twice, the second call has the expected effect:
void Foo::handleProgressChanged(Object^ sender, EventArgs^ args)
{
if (InvokeRequired)
{
IAsyncResult^ r = BeginInvoke(gcnew EventHandler(this, &Foo::handleProgressChanged), sender, args);
if (!r->AsyncWaitHandle->WaitOne(1000, false))
{
r = BeginInvoke(gcnew EventHandler(this, &Foo::handleProgressChanged), sender, args);
}
}
this->UpdateProgress();
this->Invalidate(true);
}
I am not able to boil the code down to a small self-contained example but my specific question are:
- Under which conditions can
Invoke
block the background thread, when the UI thread is idle? - Why is the second call to
BeginInvoke
successful, while the first one is not?
I'm using .NET Framework 2 and C++/CLI, however I suppose the problem is not language-specific.
Edit:
To make it clearer: the original approach works most of the time. The first events in a session are handled as expected. But later, especially when the events occur frequently, it runs into the deadlock.