91

I am not sure why this happens and I never explicitly abort threads, so it's a bit of a surprise. But I log Exceptions and I am seeing:

System.Threading.ThreadAbortException - Thread was being aborted.

It appears to happen in a call to System.Threading.WaitHandle.WaitOne. I am not sure how far this Exception goes. I don't think my threads ever terminate, because I catch log and swallow the error.

Why am I getting these errors? Perhaps it's when I am forcefully terminating my server or asking it to reboot? If it isn't then what might be causing them?

3
  • Can you show the code you have in Application_Start? Oct 3, 2011 at 0:53
  • @rick: I dont know what you expect to find but here is a snippet. var obj1=new MyServiceObject(); srv1 = new Thread(obj1.Queue); ... srv1.Start(). Note that obj1 isnt inside a using block so it isnt disposed of prematurely. Its just a plain thread i spawn on startup
    – user34537
    Oct 3, 2011 at 0:57
  • My guess is that your srv1 variable is losing scope and killing the thread. You'll need to wait on it to complete, or change the scope to a higher level scope. (I realize that this answer is 10 years late; however, I thought someone else may see this.) I had a similar problem with logging in an asp.net application - I was trying to log in a separate thread and the thread kept dying. After I changed the scope of the variable it was assigned to, the garbage collector left it alone.
    – Markus
    Mar 31, 2021 at 16:32

7 Answers 7

57

ASP.NET spawns and kills worker processes all the time as needed. Your thread may just be getting shut down by ASP.NET.

Old Answer:

Known issue: PRB: ThreadAbortException Occurs If You Use Response.End, Response.Redirect, or Server.Transfer

Response.Redirect ("bla.aspx", false);

or

try
{
    Response.Redirect("bla.aspx");
}
catch (ThreadAbortException ex)
{
}
1
  • hmm. Good answer +1 but thats not it. This is actually happening on threads i spawn (usually from Application_Start) and not on the main request path.
    – user34537
    Oct 3, 2011 at 0:40
56

Nope, ThreadAbortException is thrown by a simple Response.Redirect

2
  • 1
    hmm. Good answer +1 but thats not it. This is actually happening on threads i spawn (usually from Application_Start) and not on the main request path.
    – user34537
    Oct 3, 2011 at 0:40
  • 1
    That's only one way to get a ThreadAbortException - you make it sound like that's the only way. E.g. could also be a request took > 90 seconds so IIS killed it.
    – saille
    Aug 26, 2015 at 3:01
49

If you spawn threads in Application_Start, they will still be executing in the application pool's AppDomain.

If an application is idle for some time (meaning that no requests are coming in), or certain other conditions are met, ASP.NET will recycle the entire AppDomain.

When that happens, any threads that you started from that AppDomain, including those from Application_Start, will be aborted.

Lots more on application pools and recycling in this question: What exactly is Appdomain recycling

If you are trying to run a long-running process within IIS/ASP.NET, the short answer is usually "Don't". That's what Windows Services are for.

3
  • That sounds exactly like what is happening. I have another question... Is Application_Start run again when the site becomes active again? It looks like it isnt (but i may have coded something wrong)
    – user34537
    Oct 3, 2011 at 11:25
  • 2
    It isn't. From here: msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms178473.aspx "The Application_Start and Application_End methods are special methods that do not represent HttpApplication events. ASP.NET calls them once for the lifetime of the application domain, not for each HttpApplication instance." Oct 3, 2011 at 13:22
  • I'm seeing this happen with very little idle time. Like, between back to back requests :/
    – Triynko
    Nov 13, 2020 at 21:54
23

For a web service hosted in ASP.NET, the configuration property is executionTimeout:

<configuration> <system.web>

<httpRuntime executionTimeout="360" />

</system.web>

</configuration>

Set this and the thread abort exception will go away :)

4
  • Found this to be the fix when doing asynchronous web calls.
    – Jonny
    Sep 15, 2014 at 13:49
  • 8
    "Set this and the thread abort exception will go away".. for a few minutes ;)
    – saille
    Jan 20, 2015 at 0:55
  • Yeah, why bother with all sorts of code changes when just one line in the web.config does it. Upvoted.
    – frenchie
    Oct 6, 2016 at 11:57
  • but the MSDN says about ExecutionTimeout:"This time-out applies only if the debug attribute in the <compilation> element is set to false." I have debug=true but it still happens. Dec 17, 2019 at 5:51
11

This problem occurs in the Response.Redirect and Server.Transfer methods, because both methods call Response.End internally.

The solution for this problem is as follows.

For Server.Transfer, use the Server.Execute method instead.

8

This error can be caused by trying to end a response more than once. As other answers already mentioned, there are various methods that will end a response (like Response.End, or Response.Redirect). If you call more than one in a row, you'll get this error.

I came across this error when I tried to use Response.End after using Response.TransmitFile which seems to end the response too.

1
  • Odds are, doing anything with the response after it was ended could lead to this error.
    – jahu
    Jul 8, 2015 at 8:38
1

I got this error when I did a Response.Redirect after a successful login of the user.

I fixed it by doing a FormsAuthentication.RedirectFromLoginPage instead.

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.