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enter image description hereI am using SAP .NET Connector 3.0 and trying to login on using a separate thread so I can have the UI displaying a kind of login animation.

I am using Async and Await to start the login but the UI hangs for about 10 seconds during login.

Here is the code, its rough because I am quickly drafting a program.

async void MainWindow_Loaded(object sender, RoutedEventArgs e)
{
    Busy.Visibility = System.Windows.Visibility.Visible; // Shows progress animation

    if (await SAPLogin()) // Waits for login to finish, will always be true at the moment
    {
        await GetData(); // does things with sap

        Busy.Visibility = System.Windows.Visibility.Collapsed; // Hides progress animation
    }
 }


private Task<bool> SAPLogin()
{
    bool LoggedIn = true;

    return Task.Run(() =>
        {
           Backend = new BackendConfig();
           RfcDestinationManager.RegisterDestinationConfiguration(Backend);
           SapRfcDestination = RfcDestinationManager.GetDestination(MyServer);  // MyServer is just a string containing sever name

           SapRap = SapRfcDestination.Repository;

           BapiMD04 = SapRap.CreateFunction("MD_STOCK_REQUIREMENTS_LIST_API");

           BapiMD04.SetValue("WERKS", "140");

                return LoggedIn;
         });
}      

I can only imagine that something in the Task is using the UI?

EDIT 1: Sorry forgot to explain what GetData() does. GetData() runs various reports in SAP (lots of code). Visually, I know when its there because my little login animation will change from "Logging In" to "Grabbing Data". When I see the UI hang I see it is during the "Logging In" phase. The login animation has a simple circle spinning. This stops part way through the login and then continues after about 5 seconds.

EDIT 2: The hanging seems to occour at this line here

SapRfcDestination = RfcDestinationManager.GetDestination(MyServer);

EDIT 3: Added a Photo of the threads when pausing application at the point where I see the UI hang.

15
  • 3
    What does GetData do?
    – usr
    Feb 14, 2014 at 8:57
  • Sorry I will edit the original post so that everyone can see
    – Gaz83
    Feb 14, 2014 at 9:04
  • Comment out the whole if to make 100% sure it is causing this (I think it doesn't). if (false && await SAPLogin()).
    – usr
    Feb 14, 2014 at 9:13
  • ok just I commented it out and as expected my animation shows and no hang ups.
    – Gaz83
    Feb 14, 2014 at 9:18
  • 1
    @Gaz83, are you sure nothing inside GetData or inside the Task.Run lambda is trying to callback the UI thread with Dispatcher.Invoke? Anyhow, try my answer.
    – noseratio
    Feb 15, 2014 at 2:10

1 Answer 1

2

Presumably, nothing inside GetData or the Task.Run lambda inside SAPLogin is trying to callback the UI thread with Dispatcher.Invoke, Dispatcher.BeginInvoke or Dispatcher.InvokeAsync. Check for such possibility first.

Then, try changing your code like below. Note how Task.Factory.StartNew with TaskCreationOptions.LongRunning is used instead of Task.Run and how GetData is offloaded (despite it's already async, so mind .Unwrap() here). If that helps, try each change independently, to see which one particularly helped, or whether it was a combination of both.

async void MainWindow_Loaded(object sender, RoutedEventArgs e)
{
    Busy.Visibility = System.Windows.Visibility.Visible; // Shows progress animation

    if (await SAPLogin()) // Waits for login to finish, will always be true at the moment
    {
        //await GetData(); // does things with sap
        await Task.Factory.StartNew(() => GetData(),
            CancellationToken.None,
            TaskCreationOptions.LongRunning,
            TaskScheduler.Default).Unwrap();

        Busy.Visibility = System.Windows.Visibility.Collapsed; // Hides progress animation
    }
}

private Task<bool> SAPLogin()
{
    bool LoggedIn = true;

    return Task.Factory.StartNew(() =>
    {
        Backend = new BackendConfig();
        RfcDestinationManager.RegisterDestinationConfiguration(Backend);
        SapRfcDestination = RfcDestinationManager.GetDestination(MyServer);  // MyServer is just a string containing sever name

        SapRap = SapRfcDestination.Repository;

        BapiMD04 = SapRap.CreateFunction("MD_STOCK_REQUIREMENTS_LIST_API");

        BapiMD04.SetValue("WERKS", "140");

        return LoggedIn;
    }, 
    CancellationToken.None,
    TaskCreationOptions.LongRunning,
    TaskScheduler.Default);
}
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  • I can confirm that just changing the SAPLogin() method to your version solved the issue.
    – Gaz83
    Feb 17, 2014 at 9:36
  • @Gaz83, then my explanation is, the SAP .NET Connector uses too many threads from the thread pool. So many that there's not much left for you. Bad on them, for something which really should just do async web service calls. To verify this, check Process.GetCurrentProcess().Threads.Count and compare it to the result of ThreadPool.GetMaxThreads.
    – noseratio
    Feb 17, 2014 at 9:44
  • Now I am not sure if I have put this in the right place so I tried it after the line SapRap = SapRfcDestination.Repository and got the following results. Process.GetCurrentProcess().Threads.Count = 21 and calling ThreadPool.GetMaxThreads sets 2 output parameters which are as follows. WorkerThreads = 1023 and `CompletionPortThreads = 1000'
    – Gaz83
    Feb 17, 2014 at 10:11
  • @Gaz83, wow, 1023 is a LOT for a client-side app. Anyway, TPL doesn't 'eat' pool threads like crazy, unless TaskCreationOptions.LongRunning is used. 21 is about the number when it starts queuing tasks. That's why LongRunning helped. This post explains what's going on in more details. Make sure you don't abuse Task.Run, then you can blame SAP for that, I guess.
    – noseratio
    Feb 17, 2014 at 10:22
  • 1
    Thanks for the info, its very helpful and I have learnt a lot :-) I am not sure why its that high as my app is very simple. The UI only has 1 button on the screen and some text with a spinning circle animation. Other that that the task generation is as the code that I have posted.
    – Gaz83
    Feb 17, 2014 at 10:54

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