166

In a thread, I create some System.Threading.Task and start each task.

When I do a .Abort() to kill the thread, the tasks are not aborted.

How can I transmit the .Abort() to my tasks ?

2

13 Answers 13

247

You can't. Tasks use background threads from the thread pool. Also canceling threads using the Abort method is not recommended. You may take a look at the following blog post which explains a proper way of canceling tasks using cancellation tokens. Here's an example:

class Program
{
    static void Main()
    {
        var ts = new CancellationTokenSource();
        CancellationToken ct = ts.Token;
        Task.Factory.StartNew(() =>
        {
            while (true)
            {
                // do some heavy work here
                Thread.Sleep(100);
                if (ct.IsCancellationRequested)
                {
                    // another thread decided to cancel
                    Console.WriteLine("task canceled");
                    break;
                }
            }
        }, ct);

        // Simulate waiting 3s for the task to complete
        Thread.Sleep(3000);

        // Can't wait anymore => cancel this task 
        ts.Cancel();
        Console.ReadLine();
    }
}
10
  • 6
    Nice explanation. I have a question, how does it work when we don't have an anonymous method in the Task.Factory.StartNew ? like Task.Factory.StartNew(() => ProcessMyMethod(),cancellationToken)
    – Prerak K
    Commented Sep 25, 2013 at 5:04
  • 74
    what if there is a blocking call which does not return inside the executing task? Commented Jun 26, 2014 at 6:47
  • 4
    @mehmet6parmak I think the only thing you can do then is use Task.Wait(TimeSpan / int) to give it a (time-based) deadline from the outside.
    – Mark
    Commented Oct 20, 2014 at 9:38
  • 2
    What if I have my custom class to manage the execution of methods inside a new Task? Something like: public int StartNewTask(Action method). Inside the StartNewTask method I create a new Task by: Task task = new Task(() => method()); task.Start();. So how can I manage the CancellationToken? I would also like to know if like Thread I need to implement a logic to check if there're some Tasks that are still hanging and so kill them when Form.Closing. With Threads I use Thread.Abort(). Commented Dec 3, 2014 at 15:31
  • 2
    Omg, what a bad example! It is a simple boolean condition, of course it is the first what one would try! But i.e. I have a function in a separate Task, which may take much time to be ended, and ideally it shouldn't know anything about a threading or whatever. So how do I cancel the function with your advice?
    – Hi-Angel
    Commented Jan 29, 2015 at 11:19
36

Like this post suggests, this can be done in the following way:

int Foo(CancellationToken token)
{
    Thread t = Thread.CurrentThread;
    using (token.Register(t.Abort))
    {
        // compute-bound work here
    }
}

Although it works, it's not recommended to use such approach. If you can control the code that executes in task, you'd better go with proper handling of cancellation.

5
  • 8
    +1 for giving a different approach while stating its fallbacks. I didn't know this could be done :)
    – Joel
    Commented Jul 24, 2014 at 14:39
  • 1
    Thanks for solution! We can just pass token to method and cancel tokensource, instead of somehow getting thread instance from method and aborting this instance directly.
    – Sam
    Commented Sep 15, 2016 at 13:28
  • The task's thread that gets aborted may be a thread-pool thread or the thread of the caller invoking the task. To avoid this, you can use a TaskScheduler to specify a dedicated thread for the task. Commented Mar 31, 2020 at 11:55
  • 1
    This is no longer supported in .NET Framework versions as of 5.0+
    – Latency
    Commented Jul 10, 2021 at 1:40
34

Aborting a Task is easily possible if you capture the thread in which the task is running in. Here is an example code to demonstrate this:

void Main()
{
    Thread thread = null;

    Task t = Task.Run(() => 
    {
        //Capture the thread
        thread = Thread.CurrentThread;

        //Simulate work (usually from 3rd party code)
        Thread.Sleep(1000);

        //If you comment out thread.Abort(), then this will be displayed
        Console.WriteLine("Task finished!");
    });

    //This is needed in the example to avoid thread being still NULL
    Thread.Sleep(10);

    //Cancel the task by aborting the thread
    thread.Abort();
}

I used Task.Run() to show the most common use-case for this - using the comfort of Tasks with old single-threaded code, which does not use the CancellationTokenSource class to determine if it should be canceled or not.

6
  • 3
    Thanks for this idea. Used this approach to implement a timeout for some external code, which has no CancellationToken support... Commented May 28, 2014 at 16:47
  • 7
    AFAIK thread.abort will leave you unknown about your stack, it might be invalid. I have never tried it but I guess starting a thread in seperate app domain that thread.abort will be save! Besides, a whole thread is wasted in your solution just to abort one task. You would not have to use tasks but threads in first place. (downvote) Commented Oct 13, 2014 at 9:03
  • 1
    As I wrote - this solution is a last resort that might be considered under certain circumstances. Of course a CancellationToken or even simpler solutions that are race-condition free should be considered. The code above does only illustrate the method, not the area of usage. Commented Oct 13, 2014 at 20:14
  • 8
    I think this approach might have unknown consequences and I would not recommend it in production code. Tasks are not always guaranteed to be executed in a different thread, meaning they can be ran in the same thread as the one that created them if the scheduler decides so (which will mean the main thread will be passed to the thread local variable). In your code you might then end up aborting the main thread, which is not what you really want. Perhaps a check if the threads are the same before the abort would be a good think to have, if you insist on aborting
    – stackh34p
    Commented Nov 21, 2015 at 20:36
  • 1
    @GordonBean Here is a post that gives a nice general purpose way to abort threads safely. stackoverflow.com/a/55709530/1812732 Commented Jun 27, 2019 at 16:34
20

This sort of thing is one of the logistical reasons why Abort is deprecated. First and foremost, do not use Thread.Abort() to cancel or stop a thread if at all possible. Abort() should only be used to forcefully kill a thread that is not responding to more peaceful requests to stop in a timely fashion.

That being said, you need to provide a shared cancellation indicator that one thread sets and waits while the other thread periodically checks and gracefully exits. .NET 4 includes a structure designed specifically for this purpose, the CancellationToken.

10

I use a mixed approach to cancel a task.

  • Firstly, I'm trying to Cancel it politely with using the Cancellation.
  • If it's still running (e.g. due to a developer's mistake), then misbehave and kill it using an old-school Abort method.

Checkout an example below:

private CancellationTokenSource taskToken;
private AutoResetEvent awaitReplyOnRequestEvent = new AutoResetEvent(false);

void Main()
{
    // Start a task which is doing nothing but sleeps 1s
    LaunchTaskAsync();
    Thread.Sleep(100);
    // Stop the task
    StopTask();
}

/// <summary>
///     Launch task in a new thread
/// </summary>
void LaunchTaskAsync()
{
    taskToken = new CancellationTokenSource();
    Task.Factory.StartNew(() =>
        {
            try
            {   //Capture the thread
                runningTaskThread = Thread.CurrentThread;
                // Run the task
                if (taskToken.IsCancellationRequested || !awaitReplyOnRequestEvent.WaitOne(10000))
                    return;
                Console.WriteLine("Task finished!");
            }
            catch (Exception exc)
            {
                // Handle exception
            }
        }, taskToken.Token);
}

/// <summary>
///     Stop running task
/// </summary>
void StopTask()
{
    // Attempt to cancel the task politely
    if (taskToken != null)
    {
        if (taskToken.IsCancellationRequested)
            return;
        else
            taskToken.Cancel();
    }

    // Notify a waiting thread that an event has occurred
    if (awaitReplyOnRequestEvent != null)
        awaitReplyOnRequestEvent.Set();

    // If 1 sec later the task is still running, kill it cruelly
    if (runningTaskThread != null)
    {
        try
        {
            runningTaskThread.Join(TimeSpan.FromSeconds(1));
        }
        catch (Exception ex)
        {
            runningTaskThread.Abort();
        }
    }
}
9

To answer Prerak K's question about how to use CancellationTokens when not using an anonymous method in Task.Factory.StartNew(), you pass the CancellationToken as a parameter into the method you're starting with StartNew(), as shown in the MSDN example here.

e.g.

var tokenSource = new CancellationTokenSource();
var token = tokenSource.Token;

Task.Factory.StartNew( () => DoSomeWork(1, token), token);

static void DoSomeWork(int taskNum, CancellationToken ct)
{
    // Do work here, checking and acting on ct.IsCancellationRequested where applicable, 

}
8

You should not try to do this directly. Design your tasks to work with a CancellationToken, and cancel them this way.

In addition, I would recommend changing your main thread to function via a CancellationToken as well. Calling Thread.Abort() is a bad idea - it can lead to various problems that are very difficult to diagnose. Instead, that thread can use the same Cancellation that your tasks use - and the same CancellationTokenSource can be used to trigger the cancellation of all of your tasks and your main thread.

This will lead to a far simpler, and safer, design.

4

Tasks have first class support for cancellation via cancellation tokens. Create your tasks with cancellation tokens, and cancel the tasks via these explicitly.

4

You can use a CancellationToken to control whether the task gets cancelled. Are you talking about aborting it before it's started ("nevermind, I already did this"), or actually interrupting it in middle? If the former, the CancellationToken can be helpful; if the latter, you will probably need to implement your own "bail out" mechanism and check at appropriate points in the task execution whether you should fail fast (you can still use the CancellationToken to help you, but it's a little more manual).

MSDN has an article about cancelling Tasks: http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/dd997396.aspx

3

Task are being executed on the ThreadPool (at least, if you are using the default factory), so aborting the thread cannot affect the tasks. For aborting tasks, see Task Cancellation on msdn.

1

I tried CancellationTokenSource but i can't do this. And i did do this with my own way. And it works.

namespace Blokick.Provider
{
    public class SignalRConnectProvider
    {
        public SignalRConnectProvider()
        {
        }

        public bool IsStopRequested { get; set; } = false; //1-)This is important and default `false`.

        public async Task<string> ConnectTab()
        {
            string messageText = "";
            for (int count = 1; count < 20; count++)
            {
                if (count == 1)
                {
                //Do stuff.
                }

                try
                {
                //Do stuff.
                }
                catch (Exception ex)
                {
                //Do stuff.
                }
                if (IsStopRequested) //3-)This is important. The control of the task stopping request. Must be true and in inside.
                {
                    return messageText = "Task stopped."; //4-) And so return and exit the code and task.
                }
                if (Connected)
                {
                //Do stuff.
                }
                if (count == 19)
                {
                //Do stuff.
                }
            }
            return messageText;
        }
    }
}

And another class of the calling the method:

namespace Blokick.Views
{
    [XamlCompilation(XamlCompilationOptions.Compile)]
    public partial class MessagePerson : ContentPage
    {
        SignalRConnectProvider signalR = new SignalRConnectProvider();

        public MessagePerson()
        {
            InitializeComponent();

            signalR.IsStopRequested = true; // 2-) And this. Make true if running the task and go inside if statement of the IsStopRequested property.

            if (signalR.ChatHubProxy != null)
            {
                 signalR.Disconnect();
            }

            LoadSignalRMessage();
        }
    }
}
1

You can abort a task like a thread if you can cause the task to be created on its own thread and call Abort on its Thread object. By default, a task runs on a thread pool thread or the calling thread - neither of which you typically want to abort.

To ensure the task gets its own thread, create a custom scheduler derived from TaskScheduler. In your implementation of QueueTask, create a new thread and use it to execute the task. Later, you can abort the thread, which will cause the task to complete in a faulted state with a ThreadAbortException.

Use this task scheduler:

class SingleThreadTaskScheduler : TaskScheduler
{
    public Thread TaskThread { get; private set; }

    protected override void QueueTask(Task task)
    {
        TaskThread = new Thread(() => TryExecuteTask(task));
        TaskThread.Start();
    }

    protected override IEnumerable<Task> GetScheduledTasks() => throw new NotSupportedException(); // Unused
    protected override bool TryExecuteTaskInline(Task task, bool taskWasPreviouslyQueued) => throw new NotSupportedException(); // Unused
}

Start your task like this:

var scheduler = new SingleThreadTaskScheduler();
var task = Task.Factory.StartNew(action, cancellationToken, TaskCreationOptions.LongRunning, scheduler);

Later, you can abort with:

scheduler.TaskThread.Abort();

Note that the caveat about aborting a thread still applies:

The Thread.Abort method should be used with caution. Particularly when you call it to abort a thread other than the current thread, you do not know what code has executed or failed to execute when the ThreadAbortException is thrown, nor can you be certain of the state of your application or any application and user state that it is responsible for preserving. For example, calling Thread.Abort may prevent static constructors from executing or prevent the release of unmanaged resources.

8
  • This code fails with a runtime exception: System.InvalidOperationException: RunSynchronously may not be called on a task that was already started. Commented Mar 30, 2020 at 16:00
  • 1
    @TheodorZoulias Good catch. Thanks. I fixed the code and generally improved the answer. Commented Mar 31, 2020 at 0:18
  • 2
    Yeap, this fixed the bug. Another caveat that it should be probably mentioned is that Thread.Abort is not supported on .NET Core. Attempting to use it there results to an exception: System.PlatformNotSupportedException: Thread abort is not supported on this platform. A third caveat is that the SingleThreadTaskScheduler can not be used effectively with promise-style tasks, in other words with tasks created with async delegates. For example an embedded await Task.Delay(1000) runs in no thread, so it is unaffected be thread events. Commented Mar 31, 2020 at 4:35
  • 'SingleThreadTaskScheduler' does not implement inherited abstract member 'TaskScheduler.TryExecuteTaskInline(Task, bool)
    – Toolkit
    Commented Jan 13, 2021 at 15:22
  • @Toolkit Good catch. The last method had the wrong name. It was supposed to be TryExecuteTaskInline. I updated the code snippet. Commented Jan 13, 2021 at 17:00
-1

You can use this class..: It works for all typs of returned Values..

using System;
using System.Collections.Generic;
using System.Threading;
using System.Threading.Tasks;

namespace CarNUChargeTester
{
    public class TimeOutTaskRunner<T>
    {
        private Func<T> func;
        private int sec;
        private T result;
        public TimeOutTaskRunner(Func<T> func, int sec)
        {
            this.func = func;
            this.sec = sec;
        }

        public bool run()
        {
            var scheduler = new SingleThreadTaskScheduler();
            Task<T> task = Task<T>.Factory.StartNew(func, (new CancellationTokenSource()).Token, TaskCreationOptions.LongRunning, scheduler);
            if (!task.Wait(TimeSpan.FromSeconds(sec)))
            {
                scheduler.TaskThread.Abort();
                return false;
            }
            result = task.Result;
            return true;
        }
        public T getResult() { return result; }
    }
    class SingleThreadTaskScheduler : TaskScheduler
    {
        public Thread TaskThread { get; private set; }

        protected override void QueueTask(Task task)
        {
            TaskThread = new Thread(() => TryExecuteTask(task));
            TaskThread.Start();
        }

        protected override IEnumerable<Task> GetScheduledTasks() => throw new NotSupportedException();
        protected override bool TryExecuteTaskInline(Task task, bool taskWasPreviouslyQueued) => throw new NotSupportedException();
    }
}

To use it you can write:

TimeOutTaskRunner<string> tr = new TimeOutTaskRunner<string>(f, 10); // 10 sec to run f
                if (!tr.run())
                    errorMsg("TimeOut"); !! My func
                tr.getResult() // get the results if it done without timeout..
1
  • 1
    As it’s currently written, your answer is unclear. Please edit to add additional details that will help others understand how this addresses the question asked. You can find more information on how to write good answers in the help center.
    – Community Bot
    Commented Nov 26, 2022 at 0:47

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