Process Class
Important
Some information relates to prerelease product that may be substantially modified before it’s released. Microsoft makes no warranties, express or implied, with respect to the information provided here.
Provides access to local and remote processes and enables you to start and stop local system processes.
public ref class Process : System::ComponentModel::Component, IDisposable
public ref class Process : IDisposable
public ref class Process : System::ComponentModel::Component
public class Process : System.ComponentModel.Component, IDisposable
public class Process : IDisposable
public class Process : System.ComponentModel.Component
type Process = class
inherit Component
interface IDisposable
type Process = class
interface IDisposable
type Process = class
inherit Component
Public Class Process
Inherits Component
Implements IDisposable
Public Class Process
Implements IDisposable
Public Class Process
Inherits Component
- Inheritance
- Inheritance
-
Process
- Implements
The following example uses an instance of the Process class to start a process.
#using <System.dll>
using namespace System;
using namespace System::Diagnostics;
using namespace System::ComponentModel;
int main()
{
Process^ myProcess = gcnew Process;
try
{
myProcess->StartInfo->UseShellExecute = false;
// You can start any process, HelloWorld is a do-nothing example.
myProcess->StartInfo->FileName = "C:\\HelloWorld.exe";
myProcess->StartInfo->CreateNoWindow = true;
myProcess->Start();
// This code assumes the process you are starting will terminate itself.
// Given that it is started without a window so you cannot terminate it
// on the desktop, it must terminate itself or you can do it programmatically
// from this application using the Kill method.
}
catch ( Exception^ e )
{
Console::WriteLine( e->Message );
}
}
using System;
using System.Diagnostics;
using System.ComponentModel;
namespace MyProcessSample
{
class MyProcess
{
public static void Main()
{
try
{
using (Process myProcess = new Process())
{
myProcess.StartInfo.UseShellExecute = false;
// You can start any process, HelloWorld is a do-nothing example.
myProcess.StartInfo.FileName = "C:\\HelloWorld.exe";
myProcess.StartInfo.CreateNoWindow = true;
myProcess.Start();
// This code assumes the process you are starting will terminate itself.
// Given that it is started without a window so you cannot terminate it
// on the desktop, it must terminate itself or you can do it programmatically
// from this application using the Kill method.
}
}
catch (Exception e)
{
Console.WriteLine(e.Message);
}
}
}
}
open System.Diagnostics
try
use myProcess = new Process()
myProcess.StartInfo.UseShellExecute <- false
// You can start any process, HelloWorld is a do-nothing example.
myProcess.StartInfo.FileName <- @"C:\HelloWorld.exe"
myProcess.StartInfo.CreateNoWindow <- true
myProcess.Start() |> ignore
// This code assumes the process you are starting will terminate itself.
// Given that it is started without a window so you cannot terminate it
// on the desktop, it must terminate itself or you can do it programmatically
// from this application using the Kill method.
with e ->
printfn $"{e.Message}"
Imports System.Diagnostics
Imports System.ComponentModel
Namespace MyProcessSample
Class MyProcess
Public Shared Sub Main()
Try
Using myProcess As New Process()
myProcess.StartInfo.UseShellExecute = False
' You can start any process, HelloWorld is a do-nothing example.
myProcess.StartInfo.FileName = "C:\\HelloWorld.exe"
myProcess.StartInfo.CreateNoWindow = True
myProcess.Start()
' This code assumes the process you are starting will terminate itself.
' Given that it is started without a window so you cannot terminate it
' on the desktop, it must terminate itself or you can do it programmatically
' from this application using the Kill method.
End Using
Catch e As Exception
Console.WriteLine((e.Message))
End Try
End Sub
End Class
End Namespace
The following example uses the Process class itself and a static Start method to start a process.
#using <System.dll>
using namespace System;
using namespace System::Diagnostics;
using namespace System::ComponentModel;
// Opens the Internet Explorer application.
void OpenApplication(String^ myFavoritesPath)
{
// Start Internet Explorer. Defaults to the home page.
Process::Start("IExplore.exe");
// Display the contents of the favorites folder in the browser.
Process::Start(myFavoritesPath);
}
// Opens urls and .html documents using Internet Explorer.
void OpenWithArguments()
{
// URLs are not considered documents. They can only be opened
// by passing them as arguments.
Process::Start("IExplore.exe", "www.northwindtraders.com");
// Start a Web page using a browser associated with .html and .asp files.
Process::Start("IExplore.exe", "C:\\myPath\\myFile.htm");
Process::Start("IExplore.exe", "C:\\myPath\\myFile.asp");
}
// Uses the ProcessStartInfo class to start new processes,
// both in a minimized mode.
void OpenWithStartInfo()
{
ProcessStartInfo^ startInfo = gcnew ProcessStartInfo("IExplore.exe");
startInfo->WindowStyle = ProcessWindowStyle::Minimized;
Process::Start(startInfo);
startInfo->Arguments = "www.northwindtraders.com";
Process::Start(startInfo);
}
int main()
{
// Get the path that stores favorite links.
String^ myFavoritesPath = Environment::GetFolderPath(Environment::SpecialFolder::Favorites);
OpenApplication(myFavoritesPath);
OpenWithArguments();
OpenWithStartInfo();
}
using System;
using System.Diagnostics;
using System.ComponentModel;
namespace MyProcessSample
{
class MyProcess
{
// Opens the Internet Explorer application.
void OpenApplication(string myFavoritesPath)
{
// Start Internet Explorer. Defaults to the home page.
Process.Start("IExplore.exe");
// Display the contents of the favorites folder in the browser.
Process.Start(myFavoritesPath);
}
// Opens urls and .html documents using Internet Explorer.
void OpenWithArguments()
{
// url's are not considered documents. They can only be opened
// by passing them as arguments.
Process.Start("IExplore.exe", "www.northwindtraders.com");
// Start a Web page using a browser associated with .html and .asp files.
Process.Start("IExplore.exe", "C:\\myPath\\myFile.htm");
Process.Start("IExplore.exe", "C:\\myPath\\myFile.asp");
}
// Uses the ProcessStartInfo class to start new processes,
// both in a minimized mode.
void OpenWithStartInfo()
{
ProcessStartInfo startInfo = new ProcessStartInfo("IExplore.exe");
startInfo.WindowStyle = ProcessWindowStyle.Minimized;
Process.Start(startInfo);
startInfo.Arguments = "www.northwindtraders.com";
Process.Start(startInfo);
}
static void Main()
{
// Get the path that stores favorite links.
string myFavoritesPath =
Environment.GetFolderPath(Environment.SpecialFolder.Favorites);
MyProcess myProcess = new MyProcess();
myProcess.OpenApplication(myFavoritesPath);
myProcess.OpenWithArguments();
myProcess.OpenWithStartInfo();
}
}
}
module processstartstatic
open System
open System.Diagnostics
// Opens the Internet Explorer application.
let openApplication (myFavoritesPath: string) =
// Start Internet Explorer. Defaults to the home page.
Process.Start "IExplore.exe" |> ignore
// Display the contents of the favorites folder in the browser.
Process.Start myFavoritesPath |> ignore
// Opens urls and .html documents using Internet Explorer.
let openWithArguments () =
// url's are not considered documents. They can only be opened
// by passing them as arguments.
Process.Start("IExplore.exe", "www.northwindtraders.com") |> ignore
// Start a Web page using a browser associated with .html and .asp files.
Process.Start("IExplore.exe", @"C:\myPath\myFile.htm") |> ignore
Process.Start("IExplore.exe", @"C:\myPath\myFile.asp") |> ignore
// Uses the ProcessStartInfo class to start new processes,
// both in a minimized mode.
let openWithStartInfo () =
let startInfo = ProcessStartInfo "IExplore.exe"
startInfo.WindowStyle <- ProcessWindowStyle.Minimized
Process.Start startInfo |> ignore
startInfo.Arguments <- "www.northwindtraders.com"
Process.Start startInfo |> ignore
// Get the path that stores favorite links.
let myFavoritesPath = Environment.GetFolderPath Environment.SpecialFolder.Favorites
openApplication myFavoritesPath
openWithArguments ()
openWithStartInfo ()
Imports System.Diagnostics
Imports System.ComponentModel
Namespace MyProcessSample
Class MyProcess
' Opens the Internet Explorer application.
Public Sub OpenApplication(myFavoritesPath As String)
' Start Internet Explorer. Defaults to the home page.
Process.Start("IExplore.exe")
' Display the contents of the favorites folder in the browser.
Process.Start(myFavoritesPath)
End Sub
' Opens URLs and .html documents using Internet Explorer.
Sub OpenWithArguments()
' URLs are not considered documents. They can only be opened
' by passing them as arguments.
Process.Start("IExplore.exe", "www.northwindtraders.com")
' Start a Web page using a browser associated with .html and .asp files.
Process.Start("IExplore.exe", "C:\myPath\myFile.htm")
Process.Start("IExplore.exe", "C:\myPath\myFile.asp")
End Sub
' Uses the ProcessStartInfo class to start new processes,
' both in a minimized mode.
Sub OpenWithStartInfo()
Dim startInfo As New ProcessStartInfo("IExplore.exe")
startInfo.WindowStyle = ProcessWindowStyle.Minimized
Process.Start(startInfo)
startInfo.Arguments = "www.northwindtraders.com"
Process.Start(startInfo)
End Sub
Shared Sub Main()
' Get the path that stores favorite links.
Dim myFavoritesPath As String = Environment.GetFolderPath(Environment.SpecialFolder.Favorites)
Dim myProcess As New MyProcess()
myProcess.OpenApplication(myFavoritesPath)
myProcess.OpenWithArguments()
myProcess.OpenWithStartInfo()
End Sub
End Class
End Namespace 'MyProcessSample
The following F# example defines a runProc
function that starts a process, captures all output and error information, and records the number of milliseconds that the process has run. The runProc
function has three parameters: the name of application to launch, the arguments to supply to the application, and the starting directory.
open System
open System.Diagnostics
let runProc filename args startDir : seq<string> * seq<string> =
let timer = Stopwatch.StartNew()
let procStartInfo =
ProcessStartInfo(
RedirectStandardOutput = true,
RedirectStandardError = true,
UseShellExecute = false,
FileName = filename,
Arguments = args
)
match startDir with | Some d -> procStartInfo.WorkingDirectory <- d | _ -> ()
let outputs = System.Collections.Generic.List<string>()
let errors = System.Collections.Generic.List<string>()
let outputHandler f (_sender:obj) (args:DataReceivedEventArgs) = f args.Data
use p = new Process(StartInfo = procStartInfo)
p.OutputDataReceived.AddHandler(DataReceivedEventHandler (outputHandler outputs.Add))
p.ErrorDataReceived.AddHandler(DataReceivedEventHandler (outputHandler errors.Add))
let started =
try
p.Start()
with | ex ->
ex.Data.Add("filename", filename)
reraise()
if not started then
failwithf "Failed to start process %s" filename
printfn "Started %s with pid %i" p.ProcessName p.Id
p.BeginOutputReadLine()
p.BeginErrorReadLine()
p.WaitForExit()
timer.Stop()
printfn "Finished %s after %A milliseconds" filename timer.ElapsedMilliseconds
let cleanOut l = l |> Seq.filter (fun o -> String.IsNullOrEmpty o |> not)
cleanOut outputs,cleanOut errors
The code for the runProc
function was written by ImaginaryDevelopment and is available under the Microsoft Public License.
A Process component provides access to a process that is running on a computer. A process, in the simplest terms, is a running app. A thread is the basic unit to which the operating system allocates processor time. A thread can execute any part of the code of the process, including parts currently being executed by another thread.
The Process component is a useful tool for starting, stopping, controlling, and monitoring apps. You can use the Process component, to obtain a list of the processes that are running, or you can start a new process. A Process component is used to access system processes. After a Process component has been initialized, it can be used to obtain information about the running process. Such information includes the set of threads, the loaded modules (.dll and .exe files), and performance information such as the amount of memory the process is using.
This type implements the IDisposable interface. When you have finished using the type, you should dispose of it either directly or indirectly. To dispose of the type directly, call its Dispose method in a try
/finally
block. To dispose of it indirectly, use a language construct such as using
(in C#) or Using
(in Visual Basic). For more information, see the "Using an Object that Implements IDisposable" section in the IDisposable interface documentation.
Important
Calling methods from this class with untrusted data is a security risk. Call the methods from this class only with trusted data. For more information, see Validate All Inputs.
Note
32-bit processes cannot access the modules of a 64-bit process. If you try to get information about a 64-bit process from a 32-bit process, you will get a Win32Exception exception. A 64-bit process, on the other hand, can access the modules of a 32-bit process.
The process component obtains information about a group of properties all at once. After the Process component has obtained information about one member of any group, it will cache the values for the other properties in that group and not obtain new information about the other members of the group until you call the Refresh method. Therefore, a property value is not guaranteed to be any newer than the last call to the Refresh method. The group breakdowns are operating-system dependent.
If you have a path variable declared in your system using quotes, you must fully qualify that path when starting any process found in that location. Otherwise, the system will not find the path. For example, if c:\mypath
is not in your path, and you add it using quotation marks: path = %path%;"c:\mypath"
, you must fully qualify any process in c:\mypath
when starting it.
A system process is uniquely identified on the system by its process identifier. Like many Windows resources, a process is also identified by its handle, which might not be unique on the computer. A handle is the generic term for an identifier of a resource. The operating system persists the process handle, which is accessed through the Handle property of the Process component, even when the process has exited. Thus, you can get the process's administrative information, such as the ExitCode (usually either zero for success or a nonzero error code) and the ExitTime. Handles are an extremely valuable resource, so leaking handles is more virulent than leaking memory.
Note
This class contains a link demand and an inheritance demand at the class level that applies to all members. A SecurityException is thrown when either the immediate caller or the derived class does not have full-trust permission. For details about security demands, see Link Demands.
In .NET Framework, the Process class by default uses Console encodings, which are typically code page encodings, for the input, output, and error streams. For example code, on systems whose culture is English (United States), code page 437 is the default encoding for the Console class. However, .NET Core may make only a limited subset of these encodings available. If this is the case, it uses Encoding.UTF8 as the default encoding.
If a Process object depends on specific code page encodings, you can still make them available by doing the following before you call any Process methods:
Retrieve the EncodingProvider object from the CodePagesEncodingProvider.Instance property.
Pass the EncodingProvider object to the Encoding.RegisterProvider method to make the additional encodings supported by the encoding provider available.
The Process class will then automatically use the default system encoding rather than UTF8, provided that you have registered the encoding provider before calling any Process methods.
Base |
Gets the base priority of the associated process. |
Can |
Gets a value indicating whether the component can raise an event. (Inherited from Component) |
Container |
Gets the IContainer that contains the Component. (Inherited from Component) |
Design |
Gets a value that indicates whether the Component is currently in design mode. (Inherited from Component) |
Enable |
Gets or sets whether the Exited event should be raised when the process terminates. |
Events |
Gets the list of event handlers that are attached to this Component. (Inherited from Component) |
Exit |
Gets the value that the associated process specified when it terminated. |
Exit |
Gets the time that the associated process exited. |
Handle |
Gets the native handle of the associated process. |
Handle |
Gets the number of handles opened by the process. |
Has |
Gets a value indicating whether the associated process has been terminated. |
Id |
Gets the unique identifier for the associated process. |
Machine |
Gets the name of the computer the associated process is running on. |
Main |
Gets the main module for the associated process. |
Main |
Gets the window handle of the main window of the associated process. |
Main |
Gets the caption of the main window of the process. |
Max |
Gets or sets the maximum allowable working set size, in bytes, for the associated process. |
Min |
Gets or sets the minimum allowable working set size, in bytes, for the associated process. |
Modules |
Gets the modules that have been loaded by the associated process. |
Nonpaged |
Obsolete.
Obsolete.
Obsolete.
Gets the amount of nonpaged system memory, in bytes, allocated for the associated process. |
Nonpaged |
Gets the amount of nonpaged system memory, in bytes, allocated for the associated process. |
Paged |
Obsolete.
Obsolete.
Obsolete.
Gets the amount of paged memory, in bytes, allocated for the associated process. |
Paged |
Gets the amount of paged memory, in bytes, allocated for the associated process. |
Paged |
Obsolete.
Obsolete.
Obsolete.
Gets the amount of pageable system memory, in bytes, allocated for the associated process. |
Paged |
Gets the amount of pageable system memory, in bytes, allocated for the associated process. |
Peak |
Obsolete.
Obsolete.
Obsolete.
Gets the maximum amount of memory in the virtual memory paging file, in bytes, used by the associated process. |
Peak |
Gets the maximum amount of memory in the virtual memory paging file, in bytes, used by the associated process. |
Peak |
Obsolete.
Obsolete.
Obsolete.
Gets the maximum amount of virtual memory, in bytes, used by the associated process. |
Peak |
Gets the maximum amount of virtual memory, in bytes, used by the associated process. |
Peak |
Obsolete.
Obsolete.
Obsolete.
Gets the peak working set size for the associated process, in bytes. |
Peak |
Gets the maximum amount of physical memory, in bytes, used by the associated process. |
Priority |
Gets or sets a value indicating whether the associated process priority should temporarily be boosted by the operating system when the main window has the focus. |
Priority |
Gets or sets the overall priority category for the associated process. |
Private |
Obsolete.
Obsolete.
Obsolete.
Gets the amount of private memory, in bytes, allocated for the associated process. |
Private |
Gets the amount of private memory, in bytes, allocated for the associated process. |
Privileged |
Gets the privileged processor time for this process. |
Process |
Gets the name of the process. |
Processor |
Gets or sets the processors on which the threads in this process can be scheduled to run. |
Responding |
Gets a value indicating whether the user interface of the process is responding. |
Safe |
Gets the native handle to this process. |
Session |
Gets the Terminal Services session identifier for the associated process. |
Site |
Gets or sets the ISite of the Component. (Inherited from Component) |
Standard |
Gets a stream used to read the error output of the application. |
Standard |
Gets a stream used to write the input of the application. |
Standard |
Gets a stream used to read the textual output of the application. |
Start |
Gets or sets the properties to pass to the Start() method of the Process. |
Start |
Gets the time that the associated process was started. |
Synchronizing |
Gets or sets the object used to marshal the event handler calls that are issued as a result of a process exit event. |
Threads |
Gets the set of threads that are running in the associated process. |
Total |
Gets the total processor time for this process. |
User |
Gets the user processor time for this process. |
Virtual |
Obsolete.
Obsolete.
Obsolete.
Gets the size of the process's virtual memory, in bytes. |
Virtual |
Gets the amount of the virtual memory, in bytes, allocated for the associated process. |
Working |
Obsolete.
Obsolete.
Obsolete.
Gets the associated process's physical memory usage, in bytes. |
Working |
Gets the amount of physical memory, in bytes, allocated for the associated process. |
Begin |
Begins asynchronous read operations on the redirected StandardError stream of the application. |
Begin |
Begins asynchronous read operations on the redirected StandardOutput stream of the application. |
Cancel |
Cancels the asynchronous read operation on the redirected StandardError stream of an application. |
Cancel |
Cancels the asynchronous read operation on the redirected StandardOutput stream of an application. |
Close() |
Frees all the resources that are associated with this component. |
Close |
Closes a process that has a user interface by sending a close message to its main window. |
Create |
Creates an object that contains all the relevant information required to generate a proxy used to communicate with a remote object. (Inherited from MarshalByRefObject) |
Dispose() |
Performs application-defined tasks associated with freeing, releasing, or resetting unmanaged resources. |
Dispose() |
Releases all resources used by the Component. (Inherited from Component) |
Dispose(Boolean) |
Release all resources used by this process. |
Enter |
Puts a Process component in state to interact with operating system processes that run in a special mode by enabling the native property |
Equals(Object) |
Determines whether the specified object is equal to the current object. (Inherited from Object) |
Get |
Gets a new Process component and associates it with the currently active process. |
Get |
Serves as the default hash function. (Inherited from Object) |
Get |
Obsolete.
Retrieves the current lifetime service object that controls the lifetime policy for this instance. (Inherited from MarshalByRefObject) |
Get |
Returns a new Process component, given a process identifier and the name of a computer on the network. |
Get |
Returns a new Process component, given the identifier of a process on the local computer. |
Get |
Creates a new Process component for each process resource on the local computer. |
Get |
Creates a new Process component for each process resource on the specified computer. |
Get |
Creates an array of new Process components and associates them with all the process resources on a remote computer that share the specified process name. |
Get |
Creates an array of new Process components and associates them with all the process resources on the local computer that share the specified process name. |
Get |
Returns an object that represents a service provided by the Component or by its Container. (Inherited from Component) |
Get |
Gets the Type of the current instance. (Inherited from Object) |
Initialize |
Obsolete.
Obtains a lifetime service object to control the lifetime policy for this instance. (Inherited from MarshalByRefObject) |
Kill() |
Immediately stops the associated process. |
Kill(Boolean) |
Immediately stops the associated process, and optionally its child/descendent processes. |
Leave |
Takes a Process component out of the state that lets it interact with operating system processes that run in a special mode. |
Memberwise |
Creates a shallow copy of the current Object. (Inherited from Object) |
Memberwise |
Creates a shallow copy of the current MarshalByRefObject object. (Inherited from MarshalByRefObject) |
On |
Raises the Exited event. |
Refresh() |
Discards any information about the associated process that has been cached inside the process component. |
Start() |
Starts (or reuses) the process resource that is specified by the StartInfo property of this Process component and associates it with the component. |
Start(Process |
Starts the process resource that is specified by the parameter containing process start information (for example, the file name of the process to start) and associates the resource with a new Process component. |
Start(String, IEnumerable<String>) |
Starts a process resource by specifying the name of an application and a set of command line arguments. |
Start(String, String, Secure |
Starts a process resource by specifying the name of an application, a user name, a password, and a domain and associates the resource with a new Process component. |
Start(String, String, String, Secure |
Starts a process resource by specifying the name of an application, a set of command-line arguments, a user name, a password, and a domain and associates the resource with a new Process component. |
Start(String, String) |
Starts a process resource by specifying the name of an application and a set of command-line arguments, and associates the resource with a new Process component. |
Start(String) |
Starts a process resource by specifying the name of a document or application file and associates the resource with a new Process component. |
To |
Formats the process's name as a string, combined with the parent component type, if applicable. |
To |
Returns a string that represents the current object. (Inherited from Object) |
Wait |
Instructs the Process component to wait indefinitely for the associated process to exit. |
Wait |
Instructs the Process component to wait the specified number of milliseconds for the associated process to exit. |
Wait |
Instructs the Process component to wait the specified amount of time for the associated process to exit. |
Wait |
Instructs the process component to wait for the associated process to exit, or for the |
Wait |
Causes the Process component to wait indefinitely for the associated process to enter an idle state. This overload applies only to processes with a user interface and, therefore, a message loop. |
Wait |
Causes the Process component to wait the specified number of milliseconds for the associated process to enter an idle state. This overload applies only to processes with a user interface and, therefore, a message loop. |
Wait |
Causes the Process component to wait the specified |
Disposed |
Occurs when the component is disposed by a call to the Dispose() method. (Inherited from Component) |
Error |
Occurs when an application writes to its redirected StandardError stream. |
Exited |
Occurs when a process exits. |
Output |
Occurs each time an application writes a line to its redirected StandardOutput stream. |
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