FileSystemWatcher Network Disconnect

Kevin Higgins picture Kevin Higgins · Feb 6, 2012 · Viewed 7.2k times · Source

I have a FileSystemWatcher monitoring a file on a network share. If an event occurs to make the share unavailable, maybe due to a network problem, the FileSystemWatcher becomes disconnected.

Obviously I can handle the "Error" event, maybe do some logging and lots of articles suggest reconnecting the FSW inside the error event handler.

But what if the network share is still unavailable inside the error event. I then need to introduce a timer to test if the network share is available and attempt to reconnect the FSW.

1) Is there a better approach?

2) Is there a property that allows me to determine that the FSW has become disconnected from the file? I notice there is a non-public member of the FSW "stopListening", which appears to be set to true when the FSW becomes disconnected. But this is not publicly exposed

Any help would be appreciated ...

Thanks Kevin

Answer

MarkShep picture MarkShep · Feb 23, 2012

A couple of comments and suggestions...(which grew and grew as I was typing...sorry)

The FileSystemWatcher.Error event is fired when the FileSystemWatcher gets so many events happening so quickly that it can't handle them all. It doesn't get fired when an error occurs in watching the file system (such as the network dropping out).

I believe I've had a similar situation. The problem is that when the network connection drops out, the FileSystemWatcher will never have an event triggered, because it actually can't see what it's supposed to be watching, but it doesn't seem to be aware of the fact. When the network connection comes back, the FileSystemWatcher doesn't recover - i.e. it still can't see the (restored) connection. The only solution that we came up with that seemed to work reliably was to have a timer that regularly dropped the whole FileSystemWatcher object and created a new one, setting all of the events and watch folder etc. Since dropping and creating a new FileSystemWatcher is (relatively) quick (i.e. milliseconds) you could set the timer to activate every 10 seconds or so without using up too much of the processor. Of course, if the network is still out, the FileSystemWatcher is not going to be able to see the network no matter what you do. But that's OK, it will try again in another 10 seconds.

Two things to watch out for with this solution:

  1. When the timer activates, it needs to check that the FileSystemWatcher isn't currently processing any events, and it needs to wait if it is. So in the timer event, stop the Timer, stop the FileSystemWatcher from raising events, then wait for any FileSystemWatcher events to finish (using lock (...) {...} is a good way of doing this).
  2. After dropping and recreating the FileSystemWatcher, you need to manually check for any events that might have occurred while the FileSystemWatcher was being refreshed (or while the network was down). For example, if you're watching for files being created, and a file gets created while refreshing the FileSystemWatcher or while the network connection is out, you won't get events for those files when you start up the new instance of the FileSystemWatcher (since the files have already been created).

I hope that helps.