Difference between using Task.Yield() in a User Interface and Console App

时光怂恿深爱的人放手 提交于 2021-02-05 07:22:27

问题


I'm trying to asynchronously show a progress form that says the application is running while the actual application is running.

As following this question, I have the following:

Main Form:

public partial class MainForm : Form
{
    public MainForm()
    {
        InitializeComponent();
    }

    async Task<int> LoadDataAsync()
    {
        await Task.Delay(2000);
        return 42;
    }

    private async void Run_Click(object sender, EventArgs e)
    {
        var runningForm = new RunningForm();

        runningForm.ShowRunning();

        var progressFormTask = runningForm.ShowDialogAsync();

        var data = await LoadDataAsync();

        runningForm.Close();
        await progressFormTask;

        MessageBox.Show(data.ToString());
    }
}

Progress Form

public partial class RunningForm : Form
{
    private readonly SynchronizationContext synchronizationContext;

    public RunningForm()
    {
        InitializeComponent();
        synchronizationContext = SynchronizationContext.Current;
    }

    public async void ShowRunning()
    {
        this.RunningLabel.Text = "Running";
        int dots = 0;

        await Task.Run(() =>
        {
            while (true)
            {
                UpadateUi($"Running{new string('.', dots)}");

                Thread.Sleep(300);

                dots = (dots == 3) ? 0 : dots + 1;
            }
        });
    }

    public void UpadateUi(string text)
    {
        synchronizationContext.Post(
            new SendOrPostCallback(o =>
            {
                this.RunningLabel.Text = text;
            }),
            text);
    }

    public void CloseThread()
    {
        synchronizationContext.Post(
            new SendOrPostCallback(o =>
            {
                this.Close();
            }),
            null);
    }
}

internal static class DialogExt
{
    public static async Task<DialogResult> ShowDialogAsync(this Form form)
    {
        await Task.Yield();
        if (form.IsDisposed)
        {
            return DialogResult.OK;
        }
        return form.ShowDialog();
    }
}

The above works fine, but it doesn't work when I'm calling from outside of another from. This is my console app:

class Program
{
    static void Main(string[] args)
    {
        new Test().Run();
        Console.ReadLine();
    }
}

class Test
{
    private RunningForm runningForm;

    public async void Run()
    {
        var runningForm = new RunningForm();

        runningForm.ShowRunning();

        var progressFormTask = runningForm.ShowDialogAsync();

        var data = await LoadDataAsync();

        runningForm.CloseThread();

        await progressFormTask;

        MessageBox.Show(data.ToString());
    }

    async Task<int> LoadDataAsync()
    {
        await Task.Delay(2000);
        return 42;
    }
}

Watching what happens with the debugger, the process gets to await Task.Yield() and never progresses to return form.ShowDialog() and thus you never see the RunningForm. The process then goes to LoadDataAsync() and hangs forever on await Task.Delay(2000).

Why is this happening? Does it have something to do with how Tasks are prioritized (ie: Task.Yield())?


回答1:


Watching what happens with the debugger, the process gets to await Task.Yield() and never progresses to return form.ShowDialog() and thus you never see the RunningForm. The process then goes to LoadDataAsync() and hangs forever on await Task.Delay(2000).

Why is this happening?

What happens here is that when you do var runningForm = new RunningForm() on a console thread without any synchronization context (System.Threading.SynchronizationContext.Current is null), it implicitly creates an instance of WindowsFormsSynchronizationContext and installs it on the current thread, more on this here.

Then, when you hit await Task.Yield(), the ShowDialogAsync method returns to the caller and the await continuation is posted to that new synchronization context. However, the continuation never gets a chance to be invoked, because the current thread doesn't run a message loop and the posted messages don't get pumped. There isn't a deadlock, but the code after await Task.Yield() is never executed, so the dialog doesn't even get shown. The same is true about await Task.Delay(2000).

I'm more interested in learning why it works for WinForms and not for Console Applications.

You need a UI thread with a message loop in your console app. Try refactoring your console app like this:

public void Run()
{
    var runningForm = new RunningForm();
    runningForm.Loaded += async delegate 
    {
        runningForm.ShowRunning();

        var progressFormTask = runningForm.ShowDialogAsync();

        var data = await LoadDataAsync();

        runningForm.Close();

        await progressFormTask;

        MessageBox.Show(data.ToString());
    };
    System.Windows.Forms.Application.Run(runningForm);
}

Here, the job of Application.Run is to start a modal message loop (and install WindowsFormsSynchronizationContext on the current thread) then show the form. The runningForm.Loaded async event handler is invoked on that synchronization context, so the logic inside it should work just as expected.

That however makes Test.Run a synchronous method, i. e., it only returns when the form is closed and the message loop has ended. If this is not what you want, you'd have to create a separate thread to run your message loop, something like I do with MessageLoopApartment here.

That said, in a typical WinForms or WPF application you should almost never need a secondary UI thread.



来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/53874468/difference-between-using-task-yield-in-a-user-interface-and-console-app

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