Capture console exit C#
I am not sure where I found the code on the web, but I found it now in one of my old projects. This will allow you to do cleanup code in your console, e.g. when it is abruptly closed or due to a shutdown...
[DllImport("Kernel32")]
private static extern bool SetConsoleCtrlHandler(EventHandler handler, bool add);
private delegate bool EventHandler(CtrlType sig);
static EventHandler _handler;
enum CtrlType
{
CTRL_C_EVENT = 0,
CTRL_BREAK_EVENT = 1,
CTRL_CLOSE_EVENT = 2,
CTRL_LOGOFF_EVENT = 5,
CTRL_SHUTDOWN_EVENT = 6
}
private static bool Handler(CtrlType sig)
{
switch (sig)
{
case CtrlType.CTRL_C_EVENT:
case CtrlType.CTRL_LOGOFF_EVENT:
case CtrlType.CTRL_SHUTDOWN_EVENT:
case CtrlType.CTRL_CLOSE_EVENT:
default:
return false;
}
}
static void Main(string[] args)
{
// Some biolerplate to react to close window event
_handler += new EventHandler(Handler);
SetConsoleCtrlHandler(_handler, true);
...
}
Update
For those not checking the comments it seems that this particular solution does not work well (or at all) on Windows 7. The following thread talks about this
Full working example, works with ctrl-c, closing the windows with X and kill:
using System;
using System.Collections.Generic;
using System.Linq;
using System.Runtime.InteropServices;
using System.Text;
using System.Threading;
namespace TestTrapCtrlC {
public class Program {
static bool exitSystem = false;
#region Trap application termination
[DllImport("Kernel32")]
private static extern bool SetConsoleCtrlHandler(EventHandler handler, bool add);
private delegate bool EventHandler(CtrlType sig);
static EventHandler _handler;
enum CtrlType {
CTRL_C_EVENT = 0,
CTRL_BREAK_EVENT = 1,
CTRL_CLOSE_EVENT = 2,
CTRL_LOGOFF_EVENT = 5,
CTRL_SHUTDOWN_EVENT = 6
}
private static bool Handler(CtrlType sig) {
Console.WriteLine("Exiting system due to external CTRL-C, or process kill, or shutdown");
//do your cleanup here
Thread.Sleep(5000); //simulate some cleanup delay
Console.WriteLine("Cleanup complete");
//allow main to run off
exitSystem = true;
//shutdown right away so there are no lingering threads
Environment.Exit(-1);
return true;
}
#endregion
static void Main(string[] args) {
// Some boilerplate to react to close window event, CTRL-C, kill, etc
_handler += new EventHandler(Handler);
SetConsoleCtrlHandler(_handler, true);
//start your multi threaded program here
Program p = new Program();
p.Start();
//hold the console so it doesn’t run off the end
while (!exitSystem) {
Thread.Sleep(500);
}
}
public void Start() {
// start a thread and start doing some processing
Console.WriteLine("Thread started, processing..");
}
}
}
Check also:
AppDomain.CurrentDomain.ProcessExit