I'm struggling with how to perform some very-long-running background processing in a world of async methods.
Using the vocabulary from Stephen Cleary's blog, I'm interested in kicking off a "delegate task" after await
-ing a "promise task". I want to return the promised value as soon as it's available, and let the delegate task continue on in the background.
To handle exceptions in the un-await
-ed delegate task, I'll use an exception-handling continuation modeled after the one described here.
public async Task<int> ComplexProcessAsync()
{
...
int firstResult = await FirstStepAsync();
// THE COMPILER DOESN'T LIKE THIS
Task.Run(() => VeryLongSecondStepIDontNeedToWaitFor(firstResult)).LogExceptions();
return firstResult;
}
Since VeryLongSecondStep...()
could take many minutes, and its results are observable purely by side-effect (e.g. records appearing in a database), I reeeaaalllyy don't want to await
it.
But as pointed out, the compiler doesn't like this. It warns "Because this call is not awaited, execution of the current method continues before the call is completed. Consider applying the 'await' operator to the result of the call."
I could ignore the warning, but I get the feeling I'm not doing this in "correct" way. So what is the correct way?
Thanks!