We are using the TPL to queue long-running tasks into the threadpool. Some of the tasks can block for some time, so we are using the following pattern to cancel them:
private void RunAction(Action action, CancellationTokenSourceWithException cts)
{
try
{
s_logger.Info("Starting action on thread ID: {0}", Utils.GetCurrentNativeThreadId());
Thread taskThread = Thread.CurrentThread;
cts.Token.Register(() => InterruptTask(taskThread));
s_logger.Info("Running next action");
action();
}
catch (Exception e)
{
cts.Cancel(e);
throw;
}
This way, calling cts.Cancel()
will cause the task thread to be interrupted in case it is blocking.
This, however, has led to a problem: we don't know if the thread actually got the ThreadInterruptedException or not. It is possible that we call Thread.Interrupt()
on it, but the thread will run to completion and the task will simply end. In that case, the threadpool thread will have a ticking bomb in the form of the ThreadInterruptedException, and whenver another task runs on this thread and attempts to block, it will get this exception.
A Thread.ResetInterrupted()
method (similar to Thread.ResetAbort()
) would be helpful here, but it does not seem to exist. We can use something like the following:
try
{
someEvent.Wait(10);
}
catch (ThreadInterruptedException) {}
To swallow the ThreadInterruptedException, but it looks ugly.
Can anyone suggest an alternative? Are we wrong to be calling Thread.Interrupt on threadpool threads? It seems like the easiest way to cancel tasks: cooperative cancellation using events etc. are much more cumbersome to use, and have to propagate into all classes that we use from the task.