23

I am working on a Task parallel problem that I have many Tasks that may or may not throw Exception.

I want to process all the tasks that finishes properly and log the rest. The Task.WhenAll propage the Task exception without allowing me to gather the rest results.

    static readonly Task<string> NormalTask1 = Task.FromResult("Task result 1");
    static readonly Task<string> NormalTask2 = Task.FromResult("Task result 2");
    static readonly Task<string> ExceptionTk = Task.FromException<string>(new Exception("Bad Task"));
    var results = await Task.WhenAll(new []{ NormalTask1,NormalTask2,ExceptionTk});

The Task.WhenAll with throw the Exception of ExcceptionTk ignoring the rest results. How I can get the results ignoring the Exception and log the exception at same time?

I could wrap the task into another task that try{...}catch(){...} the internal exception but I don't have access to them and I hope I will not have to add this overhead.

4
  • You can check each individual task's status. You'll find that NormalTask1 and NormalTask2 are RanToCompletion and ExceptionTk is Faulted.
    – Dennis_E
    Sep 20, 2016 at 9:17
  • There is no overhead involved in catching an exception. If exceptions are so frequent that you want to ignore them, you could use wrapper functions that convert all results to a Result<TSuccess,TFailure> type and treat them uniformly. That's part of the Railroad-oriented programming style Sep 20, 2016 at 9:18
  • @PanagiotisKanavos The overhead was meant for the Task wrapping, not for catching the exception. Sep 20, 2016 at 12:13
  • 1
    Ooops, didn't notice you were calling WaitAll instead of WhenAll. Anyway, with WaitAll you have an expensive blocking operation already. Wrapping the response in a result class is a better option in any case. I suspect you have a pipeline of processing tasks, in which case you should also look at TPL Dataflow Sep 20, 2016 at 13:45

3 Answers 3

25

You can create a method like this to use instead of Task.WhenAll:

public Task<ResultOrException<T>[]> WhenAllOrException<T>(IEnumerable<Task<T>> tasks)
{    
    return Task.WhenAll(
        tasks.Select(
            task => task.ContinueWith(
                t => t.IsFaulted
                    ? new ResultOrException<T>(t.Exception)
                    : new ResultOrException<T>(t.Result))));
}


public class ResultOrException<T>
{
    public ResultOrException(T result)
    {
        IsSuccess = true;
        Result = result;
    }

    public ResultOrException(Exception ex)
    {
        IsSuccess = false;
        Exception = ex;
    }

    public bool IsSuccess { get; }
    public T Result { get; }
    public Exception Exception { get; }
}

Then you can check each result to see if it was successful or not.


EDIT: the code above doesn't handle cancellation; here's an alternative implementation:

public Task<ResultOrException<T>[]> WhenAllOrException<T>(IEnumerable<Task<T>> tasks)
{    
    return Task.WhenAll(tasks.Select(task => WrapResultOrException(task)));
}

private async Task<ResultOrException<T>> WrapResultOrException<T>(Task<T> task)
{
    try
    {           
        var result = await task;
        return new ResultOrException<T>(result);
    }
    catch (Exception ex)
    {
        return new ResultOrException<T>(ex);
    }
}
6
  • 1
    That's almost like Railroad oriented programming. Perhaps the OP should consider changing the original functions themselves to return a Result<TSuccess,TFailure> value, or use a wrapper function to convert all Task outcomes to Result<> Sep 20, 2016 at 9:16
  • What if a task was cancelled? If you want to handle that case too, replace t.IsFaulted with t.Exception != null.
    – svick
    Sep 20, 2016 at 9:17
  • @svick good point. Checking t.Exception wouldn't work, as a cancelled task might not have an exception set on it (just checked with Task.FromCanceled). See my updated answer. Sep 20, 2016 at 9:28
  • A possible improvement would be to use TaskContinuationOptions to define separate continuations for faulted, cancelled, completed continuations. This would make it easier to handle separate cases and would get rid of the conditional Sep 20, 2016 at 10:27
  • I used the second part of your answer to handle the errors, thank you. Sep 20, 2016 at 13:10
6

You can get the result of each successfully completed Task<TResult> from its property Result.

Task<string> normalTask1 = Task.FromResult("Task result 1");
Task<string> normalTask2 = Task.FromResult("Task result 2");
Task<string> exceptionTk = Task.FromException<string>(new Exception("Bad Task"));

Task<string>[] tasks = new[] { normalTask1, normalTask2, exceptionTk };
Task whenAll = Task.WhenAll(tasks);
try
{
    await whenAll;
}
catch
{
    if (whenAll.IsFaulted) // There is also the possibility of being canceled
    {
        foreach (Exception ex in whenAll.Exception.InnerExceptions)
        {
            Console.WriteLine(ex); // Log each exception
        }
    }
}

string[] results = tasks
    .Where(t => t.IsCompletedSuccessfully)
    .Select(t => t.Result)
    .ToArray();
Console.WriteLine($"Results: {String.Join(", ", results)}");

Output:

System.Exception: Bad Task  
Results: Task result 1, Task result 2  
7
  • Thank you Thodore, I haven't tested your code but I suppose that when the exception is thrown the WaitAll exits and catch handles the logging. By that time the other tasks might not have returned and when i try to gather the results everything seems running or cancelled. Try adding some load on the NormalTasks (Thread.Sleep). Apr 3, 2020 at 19:13
  • Hi @MenelaosVergis! The Task.WaitAll waits until all tasks have been completed, either successfully or unsuccessfully (with status faulted or canceled). Maybe you confuse it with Task.WaitAny? Apr 3, 2020 at 19:46
  • You are right that I confuse it with something, not with Task.WaitAny but with Task.WhenAll. Apr 4, 2020 at 7:41
  • @MenelaosVergis you could take a look at this question: WaitAll vs WhenAll. Commonly the Task.WhenAll is used differently from Task.WaitAll. If you just await Task.WhenAll inside a try-catch block, you'll observe only one exception. This behavior is caused by the await operator. But it is possible to observe all the exceptions. Just store the task returned by Task.WhenAll in a variable, and then examine its Exception property inside the catch block. Apr 4, 2020 at 9:44
  • Yes, I have experienced this at my own and this is why i have created this question. Read the question again, i have updated the typo from WaitAll to WhenAll. Apr 4, 2020 at 12:14
0

You can add HOC with exception handling and then check success.

 class Program
{
    static async Task Main(string[] args)
    {
        var itemsToProcess = new[] { "one", "two" };
        var results = itemsToProcess.ToDictionary(x => x, async (item) =>
        {
            try
            {
                var result = await DoAsync();
                return ((Exception)null, result);
            }
            catch (Exception ex)
            {
                return (ex, (object)null);
            }
        });

        await Task.WhenAll(results.Values);

        foreach(var item in results)
        {
            Console.WriteLine(item.Key + (await item.Value).Item1 != null ? " Failed" : "Succeed");
        }
    }

    public static async Task<object> DoAsync()
    {
        await Task.Delay(10);
        throw new InvalidOperationException();
    }
}

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