C#: GUI to display realtime messages from Windows Service

戏子无情 提交于 2019-11-27 14:12:45

What you can do is have the windows service have way of registering for an event (you can do this through using Windows Communication Foundation). When your error comes up, it fires that event, and your winforms app will be notified. It's called a duplex contract:

http://social.msdn.microsoft.com/Forums/en-US/wcf/thread/0eb69998-0388-4731-913e-fb205528d374/

http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms731184.aspx

Actually the really cool thing is that you can have multiple applications listening this way too. So you can display it on screen, and have another application log it etc. without the two external apps knowing anything about each other.

I know this has already been mentioned, but use Windows Communication Foundation (WCF). Specifically, use the Publish-Subscribe Framework developed by Juval Lowy, author of Programming WCF Services. The details are described in this excellent MSDN article, and the source code is available for free at Lowy's website.

The neat thing about this framework is that it decouples the publisher, e.g., your Windows service, from any subscribers, e.g., your GUI. The publisher "publishes" events that are of interest to the Pub/Sub Service, which is always available. From the publisher's point of view, it doesn't matter if there are any subscribers or not. The Pub/Sub Service takes care of routing events to any and all registered subscribers. In this way, your Windows service publishes events as they occur, your GUI will subscribe/unsubscribe to the Pub/Sub Service when it loads/exits, and the Pub/Sub Service will notify your GUI as events occur.

I have used this setup in my project, and it works extremely well.

I've actually used the BitFactory Logger that has a socket logger that you can use for this purpose.

What you're describing is inter-process communication, which can get messy.

The easiest and most elegant, but probably least reactive, is to have the service write entries as small text files (or append to a log), and have your GUI use a FileSystemWatcher to detect new files or updates to the log file, and read the file. You have to ensure that the service opens the file for appending in a "shared" manner, allowing read-only access while it's writing. Otherwise, you'll block one process or the other, probably causing lost messages.

Processes can communicate through some built-in pipelines. if your service writes messages to its StandardOutput pipe, the GUI can remotely attach a listener and receive events when messages are written. This is probably the most elegant non-file way to do what you want. Research the Process class, especially the OutputDataReceived event. You'll have to go look for the process from your GUI by some uniquely identifying information, using GetProcess().

You need to look for "synchronization" and "inter-process communication". In your case the service would use the global event or semaphore to signal presence of data, and GUI process would check event/semaphore state and read the updates from event log or from file.

There exist more complicated scenarios, but the above is a good starting point.

Observer pattern!

Perhaps a delegate for all observable models that you can hook into with your service?

.NET remoting over IPC channel.

易学教程内所有资源均来自网络或用户发布的内容,如有违反法律规定的内容欢迎反馈
该文章没有解决你所遇到的问题?点击提问,说说你的问题,让更多的人一起探讨吧!