Reputation: 21189
I am running a C# application, and during run-time I get the following error:
The CLR has been unable to transition from COM context 0x20e480 to COM context 0x20e5f0 for 60 seconds. The thread that owns the destination context/apartment is most likely either doing a non pumping wait or processing a very long running operation without pumping Windows messages. This situation generally has a negative performance impact and may even lead to the application becoming non responsive or memory usage accumulating continually over time. To avoid this problem, all single threaded apartment (STA) threads should use pumping wait primitives (such as CoWaitForMultipleHandles) and routinely pump messages during long running operations.
Can anyone please help me out with the problem here?
Thanks a lot.
Upvotes: 84
Views: 88139
Reputation: 160
Finally, I found a working solution for my vb.net Windows Application Form
Application.DoEvents()
Statement somewhere within the loop.
Reference: https://earlybites.wordpress.com/2012/04/10/resolution-context-switch-deadlock-was-detected/
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 1
Assuming you are using Visual Studio, you can click Ctrl+Alt+E
in the current project and exceptions window will display with select
Managed Debugging Assistants you should uncheck the "ContextSwitchDeadlock" option. then build a current project.
Upvotes: -1
Reputation: 700
This error came up for me numerous times, and I traced it down to an iteration in DataGridViewRow
, in which I set the checkbox value to true. Since I was running in debug mode, I had the option to continue, so I was able to do just this.
I hope this helps someone.
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 7547
I ran into this issue when I was trying to figure out why my OracleDataReader
was throwing an exception. I thought it was because it was getting assigned null
because the exception was related to a parameter that was `null. So I did:
while (dr.Read())
{
while (dr != null) // <-- added this line
{
...
Turned out the dr
was NEVER null and so the loop just went on and on until this message arrived, and on and on some more because you can click "Continue" to keep it going until you run out of memory (don't do this - click "OK" instead). So moral of the story, look for memory leaks that are streaming data from the database into memory in loops to infinity. The error is actually trying to warn you of a bad scenario. Best to heed it.
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 13596
To find which operation is blocking the context switch and causing the contextSwitchDeadlock MDA to be displayed, you can use the following steps. Note that I will be referring to Visual Studio 2012.
Assuming that you decide against moving the resource intensive operation off your main thread - take a look at some of the other answers and comments here before you do - you have the following options to disable the Managed Debugging Assistants.
Within the Visual Studio Debugger
...on the Debug menu, click Exceptions. (If the Debug menu does not contain an Exceptions command, click Customize on the Tools menu to add it.) In the Exceptions dialog box, expand the Managed Debugging Assistants list, and then clear the Thrown check box for the individual MDA.
Outside the Visual Studio Debugger
Note: One of the first two options must be set to 1 for the third to have any effect.
In my case, the problem was a call to ObjectContext.SaveChanges() in the Entity Framework within a console application. With the MTAThreadAttribute applied to the Main()
method the ContextSwitchDeadlock exception was no longer raised. I am unfortunately unsure of the full affects of this change.
Upvotes: 52
Reputation: 942109
The main thread of your program has been busy executing code for a minute. It is not taking care of its normal duties, pumping the message loop. That's illegal when you use COM servers in a worker thread: calls to their methods cannot be dispatched until your main thread goes idle again.
It should be readily visible, your UI should be dead as a door nail. Windows should have replaced your main window with a ghost that displays "Not Responding". Closing the window won't work, no click events have any effect.
Whatever your main thread is doing should be done by a worker thread instead. The BackgroundWorker
class is good for that, you'll find many usage help in the MSDN Library article for it. Use Debug + Break All, Debug + Windows + Threads if you have no idea what the main thread is doing.
One more possible cause: be sure to install service pack 1 if you are using the RTM version of VS2005.
Upvotes: 127
Reputation: 24853
In some cases :
Debug -> Exceptions -> Managed Debug Assistants
and unchecking the ContextSwitchDeadlock item.
Upvotes: 4
Reputation: 43
Simply select Exceptions from the Debug menu in the visual studio 2005 window , the Edxception Dialog box wil popup , select the Managed Debugging Assistants Exception Node , then select ContextSwitchDeadlock and remove the select from Thrown column . this will stop the vs from throwing the ContextSwitchDeadlock exception.
Hope this helps..
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 76011
This message indicates that some code of yours is trying to switch threads, and the target thread is busy. For example, a background thread trying to dispatch a call to the UI thread to update the UI, while the UI is running a tight loop for a while.
To actually figure out what's going on you need to break into the debugger and look at all the threads and what they are doing.
Upvotes: 11