One of my customers got an exception whenever he tried to use my product. I obtained the callstack of the exception that had occurred, the top of which is:
at System.IO.__Error.WinIOError(Int32 errorCode, String maybeFullPath)
at System.IO.__Error.WinIOError()
at System.IO.Path.GetTempFileName()
at System.Windows.Input.Cursor.LoadFromStream(Stream cursorStream)
at System.Windows.Input.Cursor..ctor(Stream cursorStream)
Googling this, I found plenty of blog posts stating this exception is thrown when there are more than 65535 temp files in the %TEMP% folder, and that the solution is to simply clear out the old temp files. I can ask the customer to do that, but this might only be a temporary solution - what if they are regularly running some other piece of software that makes frequent calls to GetTempFileName, which will make the problem reoccur over and over?
I can't just programmatically clear out the %TEMP% folder, as that might somehow damage something else, and I can't avoid calling GetTempFileName (and using my own temp folder instead) as it's not me but WPF code that's calling it.
Is there any permanent solution for this?
UPDATE: I've confirmed that the problem where the %TEMP% folder is overflowing with log files is not caused by my own code, and must be caused by some other 3rd party application on the customer's machine. I also looked into the implementation of Cursor.LoadFromStream
and it surely isn't at fault - it generates a temp file, but then deletes it in finally
block.
Cursor.LoadFromStream
that's generating the temp file. @Dennis It's related to WPF'sCursor.LoadFromStream
class. The offending code which produces so many temporary files without deletion might not even be my own, and I'd still need to address the exception.