473,396 Members | 1,975 Online
Bytes | Software Development & Data Engineering Community
Post Job

Home Posts Topics Members FAQ

Join Bytes to post your question to a community of 473,396 software developers and data experts.

Threading

Hi All,

I need help with the following: Using VB.NET 2005, I am building a
custom class in a separate assembly. The purpose of this class is to poll
the internet to determine connectivity. I have that part functioning
properly using HTTPRequest and HTTPResponse.

The problem lies here: I'd like to execute this monitoring on an
interval (Ex.: every 5 minutes), to get an up-to-date status. This updated
status would then be propagated to the class/service/app. that instanced my
class, which in my case is a WinForms application, but it can be a Windows
Service, or console app. etc...

I am trying to use the System.Threading.Thread class as from what I have
read, the other 2 types of timers are not really be usable in my situation:
System.Timers.Timer and System.Forms.Timer. I may be wrong on the
System.Timers.Timer, but the System.Forms.Form one, I am sure of this.

What is the best approach to get status data out of my custom class to
the calling app. without cross threading issues (which I am currently
experiencing when I try to transfer info to my WinForms app.). Furthermore,
should I be starting and stopping the timer while I actually perform the
polling, etc...?

Regards,

Giovanni P.

Mar 14 '06 #1
4 2451
Giovanni,

I have read the same as you. My experience is however that for a simple
application the system.forms.form timer is the best (and because that you
are polling one time in 5 minutes in my idea more than sufficient)..

For windowservices is the System.Timers.Timer
for worker threads the threading.timer

The last two work on there own threads and are therefore not as easy to
abort as the first mentioned one. Don't forget for smooth use to disable the
timer if you enter its elapsed event and to enable it again if you leave
it.

I hope this helps,

Cor

"Giovanni" <Gi******@discussions.microsoft.com> schreef in bericht
news:0A**********************************@microsof t.com...
Hi All,

I need help with the following: Using VB.NET 2005, I am building a
custom class in a separate assembly. The purpose of this class is to poll
the internet to determine connectivity. I have that part functioning
properly using HTTPRequest and HTTPResponse.

The problem lies here: I'd like to execute this monitoring on an
interval (Ex.: every 5 minutes), to get an up-to-date status. This
updated
status would then be propagated to the class/service/app. that instanced
my
class, which in my case is a WinForms application, but it can be a Windows
Service, or console app. etc...

I am trying to use the System.Threading.Thread class as from what I
have
read, the other 2 types of timers are not really be usable in my
situation:
System.Timers.Timer and System.Forms.Timer. I may be wrong on the
System.Timers.Timer, but the System.Forms.Form one, I am sure of this.

What is the best approach to get status data out of my custom class to
the calling app. without cross threading issues (which I am currently
experiencing when I try to transfer info to my WinForms app.).
Furthermore,
should I be starting and stopping the timer while I actually perform the
polling, etc...?

Regards,

Giovanni P.

Mar 14 '06 #2
Hi Cor,

Thanks for the info? I was just curious as to whether to disable my
timer, do the work, and re-enable my timer; which is what you have confirmed.
I guess my last issue is still deciding whether to use the
System.Forms.Timer or the System.Timers.Timer as you will recall that I am
going to be using this functionality from a class in a separate assembly
which for the moment is only being called by a WinForms app, but would be
implemented in Console or Service type contexts.

Regards,

Giovanni

"Cor Ligthert [MVP]" wrote:
Giovanni,

I have read the same as you. My experience is however that for a simple
application the system.forms.form timer is the best (and because that you
are polling one time in 5 minutes in my idea more than sufficient)..

For windowservices is the System.Timers.Timer
for worker threads the threading.timer

The last two work on there own threads and are therefore not as easy to
abort as the first mentioned one. Don't forget for smooth use to disable the
timer if you enter its elapsed event and to enable it again if you leave
it.

I hope this helps,

Cor

"Giovanni" <Gi******@discussions.microsoft.com> schreef in bericht
news:0A**********************************@microsof t.com...
Hi All,

I need help with the following: Using VB.NET 2005, I am building a
custom class in a separate assembly. The purpose of this class is to poll
the internet to determine connectivity. I have that part functioning
properly using HTTPRequest and HTTPResponse.

The problem lies here: I'd like to execute this monitoring on an
interval (Ex.: every 5 minutes), to get an up-to-date status. This
updated
status would then be propagated to the class/service/app. that instanced
my
class, which in my case is a WinForms application, but it can be a Windows
Service, or console app. etc...

I am trying to use the System.Threading.Thread class as from what I
have
read, the other 2 types of timers are not really be usable in my
situation:
System.Timers.Timer and System.Forms.Timer. I may be wrong on the
System.Timers.Timer, but the System.Forms.Form one, I am sure of this.

What is the best approach to get status data out of my custom class to
the calling app. without cross threading issues (which I am currently
experiencing when I try to transfer info to my WinForms app.).
Furthermore,
should I be starting and stopping the timer while I actually perform the
polling, etc...?

Regards,

Giovanni P.


Mar 14 '06 #3
I would maybe try to put the thread to sleep instead, for 5 minutes.

When it awakens, perform the processing, then put it back to sleep.

This is probably a better way to handle this.

If you only have one thread then you might want to look at calling your
other assembly asynchronously with delegates, this way you can have a
callback method in your winforms app, otherwise to pass parameters back
to your winforms app, you will have to enforce thread safety and check
if InvokeRequired before modifying data on your winforms app. It
depends on how often and at what point you will be passing data back
and forth.

Mar 14 '06 #4
Dkode,
I would maybe try to put the thread to sleep instead, for 5 minutes.

When it awakens, perform the processing, then put it back to sleep.
What is the advantage from that in your opinion. I don't see it.

I see a disadvantage, AFAIK you cannot cancel the program because it does no
events.

Cor

This is probably a better way to handle this.

If you only have one thread then you might want to look at calling your
other assembly asynchronously with delegates, this way you can have a
callback method in your winforms app, otherwise to pass parameters back
to your winforms app, you will have to enforce thread safety and check
if InvokeRequired before modifying data on your winforms app. It
depends on how often and at what point you will be passing data back
and forth.

Mar 14 '06 #5

This thread has been closed and replies have been disabled. Please start a new discussion.

Similar topics

65
by: Anthony_Barker | last post by:
I have been reading a book about the evolution of the Basic programming language. The author states that Basic - particularly Microsoft's version is full of compromises which crept in along the...
2
by: Egor Bolonev | last post by:
hi all my program terminates with error i dont know why it tells 'TypeError: run() takes exactly 1 argument (10 given)' =program==================== import os, os.path, threading, sys def...
77
by: Jon Skeet [C# MVP] | last post by:
Please excuse the cross-post - I'm pretty sure I've had interest in the article on all the groups this is posted to. I've finally managed to finish my article on multi-threading - at least for...
6
by: CK | last post by:
I have the following code in a windows service, when I start the windows service process1 and process2 work fine , but final process (3) doesnt get called. i stop and restart the windows service...
2
by: Vjay77 | last post by:
In this code: Private Sub downloadBtn_Click(ByVal sender As Object, ByVal e As System.EventArgs) If Not (Me.downloadUrlTextBox.Text = "") Then Me.outputGroupBox.Enabled = True...
11
by: Paul Sijben | last post by:
I am stumped by the following problem. I have a large multi-threaded server accepting communications on one UDP port (chosen for its supposed speed). I have been profiling the code and found...
17
by: OlafMeding | last post by:
Below are 2 files that isolate the problem. Note, both programs hang (stop responding) with hyper-threading turned on (a BIOS setting), but work as expected with hyper-threading turned off. ...
0
by: kingcrowbar.list | last post by:
Hello Everyone I have been playing a little with pyGTK and threading to come up with simple alert dialog which plays a sound in the background. The need for threading came when in the first...
7
by: Mike P | last post by:
I am trying to write my first program using threading..basically I am moving messages from an Outlook inbox and want to show the user where the process is up to without having to wait until it has...
126
by: Dann Corbit | last post by:
Rather than create a new way of doing things: http://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg21/docs/papers/2008/n2497.html why not just pick up ACE into the existing standard:...
0
by: Charles Arthur | last post by:
How do i turn on java script on a villaon, callus and itel keypad mobile phone
0
BarryA
by: BarryA | last post by:
What are the essential steps and strategies outlined in the Data Structures and Algorithms (DSA) roadmap for aspiring data scientists? How can individuals effectively utilize this roadmap to progress...
1
by: nemocccc | last post by:
hello, everyone, I want to develop a software for my android phone for daily needs, any suggestions?
0
by: Hystou | last post by:
There are some requirements for setting up RAID: 1. The motherboard and BIOS support RAID configuration. 2. The motherboard has 2 or more available SATA protocol SSD/HDD slots (including MSATA, M.2...
0
marktang
by: marktang | last post by:
ONU (Optical Network Unit) is one of the key components for providing high-speed Internet services. Its primary function is to act as an endpoint device located at the user's premises. However,...
0
Oralloy
by: Oralloy | last post by:
Hello folks, I am unable to find appropriate documentation on the type promotion of bit-fields when using the generalised comparison operator "<=>". The problem is that using the GNU compilers,...
0
by: Hystou | last post by:
Overview: Windows 11 and 10 have less user interface control over operating system update behaviour than previous versions of Windows. In Windows 11 and 10, there is no way to turn off the Windows...
0
agi2029
by: agi2029 | last post by:
Let's talk about the concept of autonomous AI software engineers and no-code agents. These AIs are designed to manage the entire lifecycle of a software development project—planning, coding, testing,...
0
isladogs
by: isladogs | last post by:
The next Access Europe User Group meeting will be on Wednesday 1 May 2024 starting at 18:00 UK time (6PM UTC+1) and finishing by 19:30 (7.30PM). In this session, we are pleased to welcome a new...

By using Bytes.com and it's services, you agree to our Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.

To disable or enable advertisements and analytics tracking please visit the manage ads & tracking page.