Handle a cancelled background task
Important APIs
Learn how to make a background task that recognizes a cancellation request, stops work, and reports the cancellation to the app using persistent storage.
This topic assumes you have already created a background task class, including the Run method that is used as the background task entry point. To get started quickly building a background task, see Create and register an out-of-process background task or Create and register an in-process background task. For more in-depth information on conditions and triggers, see Support your app with background tasks.
This topic is also applicable to in-process background tasks. But instead of the Run method, substitute OnBackgroundActivated. In-process background tasks do not require you to use persistent storage to signal the cancellation because you can communicate the cancellation using app state since the background task is running in the same process as your foreground app.
Use the OnCanceled method to recognize cancellation requests
Write a method to handle the cancellation event.
Note
For all device families except desktop, if the device becomes low on memory, background tasks may be terminated. If an out of memory exception is not surfaced, or the app doesn't handle it, then the background task will be terminated without warning and without raising the OnCanceled event. This helps to ensure the user experience of the app in the foreground. Your background task should be designed to handle this scenario.
Create a method named OnCanceled as follows. This method is the entry point called by the Windows Runtime when a cancellation request is made against your background task.
private void OnCanceled(
IBackgroundTaskInstance sender,
BackgroundTaskCancellationReason reason)
{
// TODO: Add code to notify the background task that it is cancelled.
}
void ExampleBackgroundTask::OnCanceled(
Windows::ApplicationModel::Background::IBackgroundTaskInstance const& taskInstance,
Windows::ApplicationModel::Background::BackgroundTaskCancellationReason reason)
{
// TODO: Add code to notify the background task that it is cancelled.
}
void ExampleBackgroundTask::OnCanceled(
IBackgroundTaskInstance^ taskInstance,
BackgroundTaskCancellationReason reason)
{
// TODO: Add code to notify the background task that it is cancelled.
}
Add a flag variable called _CancelRequested to the background task class. This variable will be used to indicate when a cancellation request has been made.
volatile bool _CancelRequested = false;
private:
volatile bool m_cancelRequested;
private:
volatile bool CancelRequested;
In the OnCanceled method you created in step 1, set the flag variable _CancelRequested to true.
The full background task sample OnCanceled method sets _CancelRequested to true and writes potentially useful debug output.
private void OnCanceled(IBackgroundTaskInstance sender, BackgroundTaskCancellationReason reason)
{
// Indicate that the background task is canceled.
_cancelRequested = true;
Debug.WriteLine("Background " + sender.Task.Name + " Cancel Requested...");
}
void ExampleBackgroundTask::OnCanceled(
Windows::ApplicationModel::Background::IBackgroundTaskInstance const& taskInstance,
Windows::ApplicationModel::Background::BackgroundTaskCancellationReason reason)
{
// Indicate that the background task is canceled.
m_cancelRequested = true;
}
void ExampleBackgroundTask::OnCanceled(IBackgroundTaskInstance^ taskInstance, BackgroundTaskCancellationReason reason)
{
// Indicate that the background task is canceled.
CancelRequested = true;
}
In the background task's Run method, register the OnCanceled event handler method before starting work. In an in-process background task, you might do this registration as part of your application initialization. For example, use the following line of code.
taskInstance.Canceled += new BackgroundTaskCanceledEventHandler(OnCanceled);
taskInstance.Canceled({ this, &ExampleBackgroundTask::OnCanceled });
taskInstance->Canceled += ref new BackgroundTaskCanceledEventHandler(this, &ExampleBackgroundTask::OnCanceled);
Handle cancellation by exiting your background task
When a cancellation request is received, your method that does background work needs to stop work and exit by recognizing when _cancelRequested is set to true. For in-process background tasks, this means returning from the OnBackgroundActivated method. For out-of-process background tasks, this means returning from the Run method.
Modify the code of your background task class to check the flag variable while it's working. If _cancelRequested becomes set to true, stop work from continuing.
The background task sample includes a check that stops the periodic timer callback if the background task is canceled.
if ((_cancelRequested == false) && (_progress < 100))
{
_progress += 10;
_taskInstance.Progress = _progress;
}
else
{
_periodicTimer.Cancel();
// TODO: Record whether the task completed or was cancelled.
}
if (!m_cancelRequested && m_progress < 100)
{
m_progress += 10;
m_taskInstance.Progress(m_progress);
}
else
{
m_periodicTimer.Cancel();
// TODO: Record whether the task completed or was cancelled.
}
if ((CancelRequested == false) && (Progress < 100))
{
Progress += 10;
TaskInstance->Progress = Progress;
}
else
{
PeriodicTimer->Cancel();
// TODO: Record whether the task completed or was cancelled.
}
Note
The code sample shown above uses the IBackgroundTaskInstance.Progress property being used to record background task progress. Progress is reported back to the app using the BackgroundTaskProgressEventArgs class.
Modify the Run method so that after work has stopped, it records whether the task completed or was cancelled. This step applies to out-of-process background tasks because you need a way to communicate between processes when the background task was cancelled. For in-process background tasks, you can simply share state with the application to indicate the task was cancelled.
The background task sample records status in LocalSettings.
if ((_cancelRequested == false) && (_progress < 100))
{
_progress += 10;
_taskInstance.Progress = _progress;
}
else
{
_periodicTimer.Cancel();
var settings = ApplicationData.Current.LocalSettings;
var key = _taskInstance.Task.TaskId.ToString();
// Write to LocalSettings to indicate that this background task ran.
if (_cancelRequested)
{
settings.Values[key] = "Canceled";
}
else
{
settings.Values[key] = "Completed";
}
Debug.WriteLine("Background " + _taskInstance.Task.Name + (_cancelRequested ? " Canceled" : " Completed"));
// Indicate that the background task has completed.
_deferral.Complete();
}
if (!m_cancelRequested && m_progress < 100)
{
m_progress += 10;
m_taskInstance.Progress(m_progress);
}
else
{
m_periodicTimer.Cancel();
// Write to LocalSettings to indicate that this background task ran.
auto settings{ Windows::Storage::ApplicationData::Current().LocalSettings() };
auto key{ m_taskInstance.Task().Name() };
settings.Values().Insert(key, (m_progress < 100) ? winrt::box_value(L"Canceled") : winrt::box_value(L"Completed"));
// Indicate that the background task has completed.
m_deferral.Complete();
}
if ((CancelRequested == false) && (Progress < 100))
{
Progress += 10;
TaskInstance->Progress = Progress;
}
else
{
PeriodicTimer->Cancel();
// Write to LocalSettings to indicate that this background task ran.
auto settings = ApplicationData::Current->LocalSettings;
auto key = TaskInstance->Task->Name;
settings->Values->Insert(key, (Progress < 100) ? "Canceled" : "Completed");
// Indicate that the background task has completed.
Deferral->Complete();
}
Remarks
You can download the background task sample to see these code examples in the context of methods.
For illustrative purposes, the sample code shows only portions of the Run method (and callback timer) from the background task sample.
Run method example
The complete Run method, and timer callback code, from the background task sample are shown below for context.
// The Run method is the entry point of a background task.
public void Run(IBackgroundTaskInstance taskInstance)
{
Debug.WriteLine("Background " + taskInstance.Task.Name + " Starting...");
// Query BackgroundWorkCost
// Guidance: If BackgroundWorkCost is high, then perform only the minimum amount
// of work in the background task and return immediately.
var cost = BackgroundWorkCost.CurrentBackgroundWorkCost;
var settings = ApplicationData.Current.LocalSettings;
settings.Values["BackgroundWorkCost"] = cost.ToString();
// Associate a cancellation handler with the background task.
taskInstance.Canceled += new BackgroundTaskCanceledEventHandler(OnCanceled);
// Get the deferral object from the task instance, and take a reference to the taskInstance;
_deferral = taskInstance.GetDeferral();
_taskInstance = taskInstance;
_periodicTimer = ThreadPoolTimer.CreatePeriodicTimer(new TimerElapsedHandler(PeriodicTimerCallback), TimeSpan.FromSeconds(1));
}
// Simulate the background task activity.
private void PeriodicTimerCallback(ThreadPoolTimer timer)
{
if ((_cancelRequested == false) && (_progress < 100))
{
_progress += 10;
_taskInstance.Progress = _progress;
}
else
{
_periodicTimer.Cancel();
var settings = ApplicationData.Current.LocalSettings;
var key = _taskInstance.Task.Name;
// Write to LocalSettings to indicate that this background task ran.
settings.Values[key] = (_progress < 100) ? "Canceled with reason: " + _cancelReason.ToString() : "Completed";
Debug.WriteLine("Background " + _taskInstance.Task.Name + settings.Values[key]);
// Indicate that the background task has completed.
_deferral.Complete();
}
}
void ExampleBackgroundTask::Run(Windows::ApplicationModel::Background::IBackgroundTaskInstance const& taskInstance)
{
// Query BackgroundWorkCost
// Guidance: If BackgroundWorkCost is high, then perform only the minimum amount
// of work in the background task and return immediately.
auto cost{ Windows::ApplicationModel::Background::BackgroundWorkCost::CurrentBackgroundWorkCost() };
auto settings{ Windows::Storage::ApplicationData::Current().LocalSettings() };
std::wstring costAsString{ L"Low" };
if (cost == Windows::ApplicationModel::Background::BackgroundWorkCostValue::Medium) costAsString = L"Medium";
else if (cost == Windows::ApplicationModel::Background::BackgroundWorkCostValue::High) costAsString = L"High";
settings.Values().Insert(L"BackgroundWorkCost", winrt::box_value(costAsString));
// Associate a cancellation handler with the background task.
taskInstance.Canceled({ this, &ExampleBackgroundTask::OnCanceled });
// Get the deferral object from the task instance, and take a reference to the taskInstance.
m_deferral = taskInstance.GetDeferral();
m_taskInstance = taskInstance;
Windows::Foundation::TimeSpan period{ std::chrono::seconds{1} };
m_periodicTimer = Windows::System::Threading::ThreadPoolTimer::CreatePeriodicTimer([this](Windows::System::Threading::ThreadPoolTimer timer)
{
if (!m_cancelRequested && m_progress < 100)
{
m_progress += 10;
m_taskInstance.Progress(m_progress);
}
else
{
m_periodicTimer.Cancel();
// Write to LocalSettings to indicate that this background task ran.
auto settings{ Windows::Storage::ApplicationData::Current().LocalSettings() };
auto key{ m_taskInstance.Task().Name() };
settings.Values().Insert(key, (m_progress < 100) ? winrt::box_value(L"Canceled") : winrt::box_value(L"Completed"));
// Indicate that the background task has completed.
m_deferral.Complete();
}
}, period);
}
void ExampleBackgroundTask::Run(IBackgroundTaskInstance^ taskInstance)
{
// Query BackgroundWorkCost
// Guidance: If BackgroundWorkCost is high, then perform only the minimum amount
// of work in the background task and return immediately.
auto cost = BackgroundWorkCost::CurrentBackgroundWorkCost;
auto settings = ApplicationData::Current->LocalSettings;
settings->Values->Insert("BackgroundWorkCost", cost.ToString());
// Associate a cancellation handler with the background task.
taskInstance->Canceled += ref new BackgroundTaskCanceledEventHandler(this, &ExampleBackgroundTask::OnCanceled);
// Get the deferral object from the task instance, and take a reference to the taskInstance.
TaskDeferral = taskInstance->GetDeferral();
TaskInstance = taskInstance;
auto timerDelegate = [this](ThreadPoolTimer^ timer)
{
if ((CancelRequested == false) &&
(Progress < 100))
{
Progress += 10;
TaskInstance->Progress = Progress;
}
else
{
PeriodicTimer->Cancel();
// Write to LocalSettings to indicate that this background task ran.
auto settings = ApplicationData::Current->LocalSettings;
auto key = TaskInstance->Task->Name;
settings->Values->Insert(key, (Progress < 100) ? "Canceled with reason: " + CancelReason.ToString() : "Completed");
// Indicate that the background task has completed.
TaskDeferral->Complete();
}
};
TimeSpan period;
period.Duration = 1000 * 10000; // 1 second
PeriodicTimer = ThreadPoolTimer::CreatePeriodicTimer(ref new TimerElapsedHandler(timerDelegate), period);
}
Related topics
- Create and register an in-process background task.
- Create and register an out-of-process background task
- Declare background tasks in the application manifest
- Guidelines for background tasks
- Monitor background task progress and completion
- Register a background task
- Respond to system events with background tasks
- Run a background task on a timer
- Set conditions for running a background task
- Update a live tile from a background task
- Use a maintenance trigger
- Debug a background task
- How to trigger suspend, resume, and background events in UWP apps (when debugging)