Use a CancellationTokenSource
. The source is a factory for CancellationTokens
. You pass this token on to everyone you want to be able to cancel its processing in a neat way. When you want to cancel all processes that has a CancellationToken
from the same CancellationTokenSource
, just tell the CancellationTokenSource
to send a cancel to all CancellationTokens
it producted, thus cancelling all processes that have tokens from this source.
And the nice thing is, a CancellationTokenSource
has a CancelAfter(some timeout)
.
Its good practice, to let your process starter give you the cancellationToken, so your process starter can decide which processes it wants to cancel in one call.
public async Task<MyResult> MyProcessAsync(CancellationToken cancellationToken, ...)
{
// do something lengthy processing, without await, regularly check if Cancellation requested
while (stillProcessing)
{
cancellationToken.ThrowIfCancellationRequested();
... // process
}
// do some processing with async-await:
await myDbContext.SaveChangesAsync(cancellationToken);
}
Usage:
private async Task LengthyProcessing(...)
{
CancellationTokenSource tokenSource = new CancellationTokenSource();
tokenSource.CancelAfter(TimeSpan.FromSeconds(5));
CancellationToken myCancellationToken = tokenSource.Token
try
{
// Start one task, don't await yet:
var myTask = await MyProcessAsync(myCancellationToken, ...)
// during processing there will be regular check if cancellation requested
// meanwhile, whenever myTask has to await, I can do some processing
// I'll have to check for cancellation regularly also:
while(...)
{
myCancellationToken.ThrowIfCancellationRequested();
DoSomeProcessing();
...
}
MyResult result = await myTask;
// if here, not cancelled. can use Result:
ProcessResult(result);
}
catch (OperationCanceledException exc)
{
ProcessOperationCanceled();
}
}
Note that only one CancelltionTokenSource is used. Whenever this source thinks that something should be cancelled, all threads that have tokens from this source get notified about the cancellationrequest.
Instead of using exception handling via CancellationToken.ThrowIfCancellationRequested()
consider using bool CancellationToken.IsCancellationRequested
.
MSDN how to cancel a task and its children
Thread.Abort()
unless you are trying to forcibly crash out of your app. Calling abort can corrupt the state of your .NET run-time resulting in the results of all other threads not being reliable.