A (global) static IntPtr var is passed to a p/invoke DLL interop call which places a valid handle to a USB device in regular code into that var.
private static IntPtr commHandle = (IntPtr)0;
When the USB device is hung or in a strange state, that call to the interop code waits for reply – endlessly. To avoid an application hang, I put the code into an anonymous method thread (below) inside of the normal method, and although the call to open the port works, using the returned handle results in errors – the same kind of errors you’d get if the port wasn’t opened in the first place.
public IntPtr OpenPort(int deviceID)
Thread weAreAnonymous = new Thread(() =>
{
if( 0==(int)commHandle)
{
var res = dllCommOpen(deviceID, out commHandle);
}
if ((int)res > 0)
{
dllComFlush(res);
this.IsOpen = ((int)res != 0);
}
});
weAreAnonymous.Start();
Now we wait for a short time for thread to open the port. If the thread is still running after a short nap, we know that the port open failed and can handle accordingly... Only, the returned handle while appearing to be valid, doesn't seem to really point to an open port!
res
in the secondif
is not the sameres
as you get fromdllCommOpen
: that one is local to the block of the firstif
.