Getting the thread ID from a thread
GetThreadId
returns the ID of a given native thread. There are ways to make it work with managed threads, I'm sure, all you need to find is the thread handle and pass it to that function.
GetCurrentThreadId
returns the ID of the current thread.
GetCurrentThreadId
has been deprecated as of .NET 2.0: the recommended way is the Thread.CurrentThread.ManagedThreadId
property.
In C# when debugging threads for example, you can see each thread's ID.
This will be the Ids of the managed threads. ManagedThreadId
is a member of Thread
so you can get the Id from any Thread object. This will get you the current ManagedThreadID:
Thread.CurrentThread.ManagedThreadId
To get an OS thread by its OS thread ID (not ManagedThreadID), you can try a bit of linq.
int unmanagedId = 2345;
ProcessThread myThread = (from ProcessThread entry in Process.GetCurrentProcess().Threads
where entry.Id == unmanagedId
select entry).First();
It seems there is no way to enumerate the managed threads and no relation between ProcessThread and Thread, so getting a managed thread by its Id is a tough one.
For more details on Managed vs Unmanaged threading, see this MSDN article.
You can use the deprecated AppDomain.GetCurrentThreadId
to get the ID of the currently running thread. This method uses a PInvoke to the Win32 API method GetCurrentThreadID
, and will return the Windows thread ID.
This method is marked as deprecated because the .NET Thread object does not correspond to a single Windows thread, and as such there is no stable ID which can be returned by Windows for a given .NET thread.
See configurator's answer for more reasons why this is the case.