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As far as I can see from the documentation, the way you are supposed to check if there are messages in a message queue is to use the Peek method. You then rely on it failing with a MessageQueueException to tell you that the queue was empty.

    public bool IsQueueEmpty()
    {
        bool isQueueEmpty = false;
        MessageQueue myQueue = new MessageQueue(".\\myQueue");

        try
        {
            myQueue.Peek(new TimeSpan(0));
            isQueueEmpty = false;
        }

        catch(MessageQueueException e)
        {
            if (e.MessageQueueErrorCode == 
                MessageQueueErrorCode.IOTimeout)
            {
                isQueueEmpty = true;
            }
        }
        return isQueueEmpty;
    }

I've always been told - and have experienced - that Exeptions are costly, and should not be used for normal operations. So my questions are:

  • Are my assumptions that relying on catching the MessageQueueException is a costly operation correct?

  • Are there any way to synchronously check if there are messages in a queue without having to rely on exceptions?

I'm working with the System.Messaging namespace in C#, but if I would need to go unmanaged to solve this that could be an option. And note that I want a solution without using WCF with MSMQ.

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Update: I don't claim that performance is not important. But I think that inter process communication is very expensive in comparison to exception.

Before update:

  • I think that in the context of inter process communication( which is what msmq does) the cost of exception is unimportant. Test if you want to be sure.
  • I don't think so.
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We pass messages through a pipeline of services where we use queues between them. We want to have the highest throughput possible, so it's not unimportant, but so far we have good enough performance. – Torbjørn Sep 18 at 12:24
I'll wait to see if I get any other comments, but if I don't I'll accept your answer :| – Torbjørn Sep 19 at 10:52

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