I prefer System.Threading.Timer for things like this, because I don't have to go through the event handling mechanism:
Timer UpdateTimer = new Timer(UpdateCallback, null, 30000, 30000);
object updateLock = new object();
void UpdateCallback(object state)
{
if (Monitor.TryEnter(updateLock))
{
try
{
// do stuff here
}
finally
{
Monitor.Exit(updateLock);
}
}
else
{
// previous timer tick took too long.
// so do nothing this time through.
}
}
You can eliminate the need for the lock by making the timer a one-shot and re-starting it after every update:
// Initialize timer as a one-shot
Timer UpdateTimer = new Timer(UpdateCallback, null, 30000, Timeout.Infinite);
void UpdateCallback(object state)
{
// do stuff here
// re-enable the timer
UpdateTimer.Change(30000, Timeout.Infinite);
}
