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My App (Windows 7, Visual C++, Release-Build) needs to write some data when windows is shutting down (restarting, user logs off). After all I want to do the same stuff as on receiving WM_CLOSE-Message which gets called during a regular close of my App (Alt-f4, Closing the window,...)

I don't need any User-Input, Dialogs and so on. Just silent writing. The writing itself should last less than a second.

To do so I do the following:

LRESULT CMainFrame::WindowProc(UINT message, WPARAM wParam, LPARAM lParam)
{
  if (message == WM_CLOSE){
    TRACE(_T("got WM_CLOSE"));
    SaveMyData();
  }

  switch (message) {
    case WM_QUERYENDSESSION:
        TRACE(_T("findme: WM_QUERYENDSESSION"));
        {
                BOOL bShutdownBlocked = ShutdownBlockReasonCreate(theApp.m_pMainWnd->GetSafeHwnd(), _T("Save data"));
                TRACE(_T("blocked: %d, GetlastError: %d"), bShutdownBlocked, GetLastError());
        }

        //continue shutdown-sequence
        return TRUE;

    case WM_ENDSESSION:
        TRACE(_T("findme: WM_ENDSESSION. Store? %d"), FALSE != (BOOL)wParam);
        if (FALSE != (BOOL)wParam) 
        {
          long lTickStart = GetTickCount();
          TRACE(_T(">>> Sleep..."));
          ::Sleep(1000); //just a Test: do something while shutting down
          TRACE(_T("<<< Sleep: %d ms"), GetTickCount()-lTickStart);

          BOOL bUnblockShutdown = ShutdownBlockReasonDestroy(theApp.m_pMainWnd->GetSafeHwnd());
          TRACE(_T("unblock: %d"), bUnblockShutdown);
        }
        return 0L;

    default:
        return CMDIFrameWnd::WindowProc(message, wParam, lParam);
    }
}

All Traces are redirected into a file which I examine.

I tested this with the Restart Manager from the Logo Testing Tools for Windows under Win7 (rmtool -S -pid) and it works fine. I get the following Trace-Output:

findme: WM_QUERYENDSESSION
blocked 1, GetlastError: 0
findme: WM_ENDSESSION. Store? 1
>>> Sleep...
<<< Sleep: 1015 ms
unblock: 1
got WM_CLOSE

Notice the "got WM_CLOSE" which calls code to save my Data.

But it does not work, when I actually shut windows down or logoff or use rmtool with the -lr option. In this case I just get the following output:

findme: WM_QUERYENDSESSION
blocked 1, GetlastError: 0
findme: WM_ENDSESSION. Store? 1
>>> Sleep...
<<< Sleep: 1000 ms
unblock: 1

Here the WM_CLOSE-Message is no received.

Is it wrong to rely on that Message when shutting down or what to I make wrong?

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  • 2
    When shutting down, Windows doesn't send WM_CLOSE messages. It does, however, send WM_ENDSESSION and WM_QUIT messages, so those are what you should be listening for. Jul 2, 2019 at 7:16
  • @werner Henze: ShutdownBlockReasonCreate does not block anything. It just sets a message that gets displayed to the user when shutdown is delayed. The meaning of returning TRUE in WM_QUERYENDSESSION is "let windows shutdown continue" instead of FALSE which would mean "stop shutdown-sequence". And even IF I would return FALSE windows still sends WM_ENDSESSION but with wParam set to 0
    – suriel
    Jul 2, 2019 at 7:36
  • @CodyGray WM_QUIT doesn't get sent as well
    – suriel
    Jul 2, 2019 at 8:29
  • It's possible that I misremembered that. You are nevertheless guaranteed to get WM_QUERYENDSESSION and WM_ENDSESSION in the event of a system shut down. Why don't you just handle one or the other of those? Jul 3, 2019 at 5:51
  • @CodyGray <stackoverflow.com/questions/56797625/… you please ans this question ?
    – kish
    Jul 5, 2019 at 17:36

2 Answers 2

1

As MSDN says

When an application returns TRUE for WM_QUERYENDSESSION, it receives the WM_ENDSESSION message and it is terminated, regardless of how the other applications respond to the WM_QUERYENDSESSION message.

MSDN does not specify that Windows terminates your application by sending a WM_CLOSE to it. You should do the saving in the WM_ENDSESSION handler to be on the safe side.

BTW, you should remove the call to ShutdownBlockReasonCreate. What is the use of it? If it worked you would not get a WM_ENDSESSION anymore. That function should be called in advance if you want to prevent a shutdown.

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  • ShutdownBlockReasonCreate is OK. See MSDN : Applications should call this function as they begin an operation that cannot be interrupted, such as burning a CD or DVD. When the operation has completed, call the ShutdownBlockReasonDestroy function to indicate that the system can be shut down.
    – Castorix
    Jul 2, 2019 at 7:44
  • 1
    @Castorix If you call ShutdownBlockReasonCreate in the WM_QUERYENDSESSION handler, what do you expect? The code shown expects a WM_ENDSESSION. Case 1: Windows is already doing a shutdown (thus the WM_QUERYENDSESSION) and ignores ShutdownBlockReasonCreate -> so why call the function? Case 2: Windows is accepting the ShutdownBlockReasonCreate, so it will not proceed and WM_ENDSESSION will not be sent, thus ShutdownBlockReasonDestroy will not be called and the ShutdownBlockReasonCreate will stay in effect until the application is closed. Both cases don't look right to me. Jul 2, 2019 at 8:08
  • @WernerHenze: see my comment above (was originally to your first comment which is deleted meanwhile). ShutdownBlockReasonCreate dooesn't blocks anything. It just sets a User-Message
    – suriel
    Jul 2, 2019 at 8:16
  • 1
    And if you see MS samples (old SDK) (or adapted samples on Github) ShutdownBlockReasonCreate is always called in WM_QUERYENDSESSION, just to inform Windows
    – Castorix
    Jul 2, 2019 at 8:24
  • @Castorix MSDN says "Indicates that the system cannot be shut down and sets a reason string to be displayed to the user if system shutdown is initiated.". From my understanding WM_QUERYENDSESSION is sent after system shutdown is initiated. So I fail to see why ShutdownBlockReasonCreate in WM_QUERYENDSESSION should work. I can't find a good documentation for it, so maybe I should just write a short program to test it. Jul 2, 2019 at 14:12
0

I think the trick is do do everything right in WM_ENDSESSION without sending or receiving any Windows-Messages.

Also you shouldn't rely too much on the rmtool.exe, at least when used without the -l-Parameter. It just behaves diffent than shutting down windows. So to test shutdown-scenarios you really have to shutdown (logoff, restart) instead of just simulating it.

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