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FileSystemWatcher stops catching events

I am writing a c# program to let me know when a file has been added or deleted. I run it on my Windows 7 machine and watch an FTP server on our network.

It works fine but will suddenly stop catching any events. I'm guessing that it might be losing connection to the server or there is a glitch in the network.

How can I handle this situation in the code. Is there some exception I can watch for and try to restart the FileSystemWatcher object.

Any suggestions and code samples would be appreciated.

like image 442
Paul Avatar asked May 31 '11 07:05

Paul


2 Answers

I needed to add an error handler for the FileSystemWatcher

fileSystemWatcher.Error += new ErrorEventHandler(OnError);

And then add this code:

private void OnError(object source, ErrorEventArgs e)
{
    if (e.GetException().GetType() == typeof(InternalBufferOverflowException))
    {
        txtResults.Text += "Error: File System Watcher internal buffer overflow at " + DateTime.Now + "\r\n";
    }
    else
    {
        txtResults.Text += "Error: Watched directory not accessible at " + DateTime.Now + "\r\n";
    }
    NotAccessibleError(fileSystemWatcher ,e);
}

Here is how I reset the SystemFileWatcher object:

   static void NotAccessibleError(FileSystemWatcher source, ErrorEventArgs e)
    {
        source.EnableRaisingEvents = false;
        int iMaxAttempts = 120;
        int iTimeOut = 30000;
        int i = 0;
        while (source.EnableRaisingEvents == false && i < iMaxAttempts)
        {
            i += 1;
            try
            {
                source.EnableRaisingEvents = true;
            }
            catch
            {
                source.EnableRaisingEvents = false;
                System.Threading.Thread.Sleep(iTimeOut);
            }
        }

    }

I think this code should do what I want it to do.

like image 76
Paul Avatar answered Sep 21 '22 13:09

Paul


The previous answer does not fix it completely, I had to reset the watcher not just turn it on and off. I use filesystemwatcher on a window service

void NotAccessibleError(FileSystemWatcher source, ErrorEventArgs e)
{
    int iMaxAttempts = 120;
    int iTimeOut = 30000;
    int i = 0;
    while ((!Directory.Exists(source.Path) || source.EnableRaisingEvents == false) && i < iMaxAttempts)
    {
        i += 1;
        try
        {
            source.EnableRaisingEvents = false;
            if (!Directory.Exists(source.Path))
            {
                MyEventLog.WriteEntry("Directory Inaccessible " + source.Path + " at " + DateTime.Now.ToString("HH:mm:ss"));
                System.Threading.Thread.Sleep(iTimeOut);
            }
            else
            { 
                // ReInitialize the Component
                source.Dispose();
                source = null;
                source = new System.IO.FileSystemWatcher();
                ((System.ComponentModel.ISupportInitialize)(source)).BeginInit();
                source.EnableRaisingEvents = true;
                source.Filter = "*.tif";
                source.Path = @"\\server\dir";
                source.NotifyFilter = System.IO.NotifyFilters.FileName;
                source.Created += new System.IO.FileSystemEventHandler(fswCatchImages_Changed);
                source.Renamed += new System.IO.RenamedEventHandler(fswCatchImages_Renamed);
                source.Error += new ErrorEventHandler(OnError);
                ((System.ComponentModel.ISupportInitialize)(source)).EndInit();
                MyEventLog.WriteEntry("Try to Restart RaisingEvents Watcher at " + DateTime.Now.ToString("HH:mm:ss"));
            }
        }
        catch (Exception error)
        {
            MyEventLog.WriteEntry("Error trying Restart Service " + error.StackTrace + " at " + DateTime.Now.ToString("HH:mm:ss"));
            source.EnableRaisingEvents = false;
            System.Threading.Thread.Sleep(iTimeOut);
        }
    }
}
like image 23
Rene Avatar answered Sep 21 '22 13:09

Rene