I have to check if a set of file paths represent an existing file.
It works fine except when the path contains a network share on a machine that's not on the current network. In this case it takes a pretty long time (30 or 60 seconds) to timeout.
Questions
Is there a way to shorten the timeout for non existing network shares? (I'm certain that when they do exist they'll answer quickly, so a timeout of 1 sec would be fine)
Is there any other way to solve this issue without starting to cache and making the algorithm more complex? (ie, I already know these X network shares don't exist, skip the rest of the matching paths)
UPDATE: Using Threads work, not particularly elegant, though
public bool pathExists(string path)
{
bool exists = true;
Thread t = new Thread
(
new ThreadStart(delegate ()
{
exists = System.IO.File.Exists(path);
})
);
t.Start();
bool completed = t.Join(500); //half a sec of timeout
if (!completed) { exists = false; t.Abort(); }
return exists;
}
This solution avoids the need for a thread per attempt, first check which drives are reachable and store that somewhere.
First of all, there is a "timeout" value that you can set in the IsDriveReady function. I have it set for 5 seconds, but set it for whatever works for you.
3 methods are used below:
- The first is the WNetGetConnection API function that gets the UNC (\servername\share) of the drive
- The second is our main method: The Button1_Click event
- The third is the IsDriveReady function that pings the server.
This worked great for me! Here you go:
'This API Function will be used to get the UNC of the drive Private Declare Function WNetGetConnection Lib "mpr.dll" Alias _ "WNetGetConnectionA" _ (ByVal lpszLocalName As String, _ ByVal lpszRemoteName As String, _ ByRef cbRemoteName As Int32) As Int32 'This is just a button click event - add code to your appropriate event Private Sub Button1_Click(ByVal sender As System.Object, ByVal e As System.EventArgs) Handles Button1.Click Dim bIsReady As Boolean = False For Each dri As IO.DriveInfo In IO.DriveInfo.GetDrives() 'If the drive is a Network drive only, then ping it to see if it's ready. If dri.DriveType = IO.DriveType.Network Then 'Get the UNC (\\servername\share) for the ' drive letter returned by dri.Name Dim UNC As String = Space(100) WNetGetConnection(dri.Name.Substring(0, 2), UNC, 100) 'Presuming the drive is mapped \\servername\share ' Parse the servername out of the UNC Dim server As String = _ UNC.Trim().Substring(2, UNC.Trim().IndexOf("\", 2) - 2) 'Ping the server to see if it is available bIsReady = IsDriveReady(server) Else bIsReady = dri.IsReady End If 'Only process drives that are ready If bIsReady = True Then 'Process your drive... MsgBox(dri.Name & " is ready: " & bIsReady) End If Next MsgBox("All drives processed") End Sub Private Function IsDriveReady(ByVal serverName As String) As Boolean Dim bReturnStatus As Boolean = False '*** SET YOUR TIMEOUT HERE *** Dim timeout As Integer = 5 '5 seconds Dim pingSender As New System.Net.NetworkInformation.Ping() Dim options As New System.Net.NetworkInformation.PingOptions() options.DontFragment = True 'Enter a valid ip address Dim ipAddressOrHostName As String = serverName Dim data As String = "aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa" Dim buffer As Byte() = System.Text.Encoding.ASCII.GetBytes(data) Dim reply As System.Net.NetworkInformation.PingReply = _ pingSender.Send(ipAddressOrHostName, timeout, buffer, options) If reply.Status = Net.NetworkInformation.IPStatus.Success Then bReturnStatus = True End If Return bReturnStatus End Function
UNC
name.ping
the drive.if Google is not the referer, EE doesn't show the answer for free. Links to EE are not helpful.
OP found the article I've mentioned in my original answer and was kind enough to include the source code for the solution to his question.
Another "thread solution":
/// <sumary>Check if file exists with timeout</sumary>
/// <param name="fileInfo">source</param>
/// <param name="millisecondsTimeout">The number of milliseconds to wait,
/// or <see cref="System.Threading.Timeout.Infinite"/> (-1) to wait indefinitely.</param>
/// <returns>Gets a value indicating whether a file exists.</returns>
public static bool Exists(this FileInfo fileInfo, int millisecondsTimeout)
{
var task = new Task<bool>(() => fileInfo.Exists);
task.Start();
return task.Wait(millisecondsTimeout) && task.Result;
}
Source: http://www.jonathanantoine.com/2011/08/18/faster-file-exists/
There are some concerns about "drive not responding fast enough", so this is compromise between speed and "the truth". Don't you use It if you want to be sure 100%.
Use Threads to do the checks. I think that threads can be timed out.
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