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I have a web api 2 controller, the client requests the controller for some kind of html generations(consists of images, files etc.). As the process needs some time and I don't want the users to wait, I have followed the following approach in the Controller :

...Controller(){
Task.Run(() =>
        {
          //calling heavy duty method to download files where Task.WaitAll() resides
          DownloadAndRename()
        });
}

DownloadAndRename(){
     //created some child task here and run them in task.waitall()
     //Task.WaitAll() here
}

I have created tasks for every file to download, rename and other processes. Then execute them in Task.WaitAll().

When I locally run the application, everything is okay. But when I deploy to my test server, it was throwing following exception:

Message: System.Threading.ThreadAbortException: Thread was being aborted.

P.S. In my pc, I have only one application running in the app pool, whereas in my test server there are 8 in that particular pool.

How can I overcome the exception?

Update 1: I have tried by removing the task.WaitAll and do the implementation without using Task. Still, I get the thread abort error, I think somehow the Task.Run() get timed out.

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  • You could look at other options like Hangfire. It is designed to execute long running processes inside asp.net framework / asp.net core.
    – Silvermind
    Oct 17, 2018 at 12:43
  • If you want to run DownloadAndRename() asynchronously, you could pass the Task returned by Task.Run() into Task.WaitAll(). Task.WaitAll() would need to be called inside the Controller() scope. Note that Task.WaitAll() will block the calling thread, however. Is it possible to make the Controller method async and await DownloadAndRename() instead? That'll ensure that the calling thread isn't blocked. Oct 17, 2018 at 12:50
  • @JamieButterworth, I have tried by removing the task.WaitAll, and do the implementation without using Task. Still I get the thread abort error, I think somehow the Task.Run() get timed out.
    – lukai
    Oct 17, 2018 at 12:56
  • The problem is, asp.net isn't "aware" of what you're doing with tasks and several of its mechanisms around recycling, etc only try to protect requests and things linked to them. It seems this really would be better placed in a separate executable, such as a windows service, that then the asp.net application interacts with via some form of IPC. Oct 17, 2018 at 13:01
  • This code guarantees a ThreadAbortException. Task.Run without awaiting starts a task and simply forgets about it. Task.WaitAll() ensures this task will be still there when ASP.NET terminates the thread at the end of the request, or when it recycles. There are a LOT of articles that explain how to start long-running jobs in ASP.NET or ASP.NET Core. Which one do you target? Oct 17, 2018 at 13:01

1 Answer 1

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I think the issue is a simple misunderstanding of task implementation.

If you want the task to run immediately as a background task, you can add async keyword and Task return type to the Controller action and make DownloadAndRename() async and make it return a Task and then await DownloadAndRename() from inside the controller action scope. The calling thread won't be blocked this way and any code after the task will not be executed until the returned task is complete.

async Task Controller()
{
await DownloadAndRename();
}

If that still doesn't work after removing Task.WaitAll(), I'd have a read of this as it might genuinely be timing out as you said or could be exceptioning for another reason: Why am i getting "Thread was being aborted" in asp.net?

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  • I have followed the second option already, but it fails. I am wondering why it works in my local machine but not in my dev server.
    – lukai
    Oct 18, 2018 at 5:14
  • The second option is pointless and simply won't work - IIS will terminate that thread at some point, unless the operation just happens to finish in time. It's also pointless - why spin up a another thread when the current one could perform the operation itself? async/await in web applications is used to improve scalability, not to avoid blocking. There's no UI thread to block, all requests get served by a different thread Oct 18, 2018 at 6:50
  • @PanagiotisKanavos Thanks. I've read through Phil Haack's article and now understand the dangers of running a task like in example 2 so I've removed it from my answer. Oct 18, 2018 at 15:23
  • @PanagiotisKanavos, I have some operations to be done in controller upon completion of DownloadAndRename method, making my controller async is blocking my UI thread. I'm not sure what is going wrong. Maybe I need to study more regarding this.
    – lukai
    Oct 19, 2018 at 5:24
  • 2
    @lukai there is no UI thread in web applications. Making the controller async won't block anything. If you want your action to complete but leave the job running in the background you have a background task. You need to use QueueBackgroundWorkItem to tell IIS about it and not abort the thread Oct 19, 2018 at 7:46

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