How to catch exceptions from processes in C#

2020-02-07 03:20发布

I have an acceptance runner program here that looks something like this:

public Result Run(CommandParser parser)
{
    var result = new Result();
    var watch = new Stopwatch();

    watch.Start();

    try
    {
        _testConsole.Start();

        parser.ForEachInput(input =>
        {
            _testConsole.StandardInput.WriteLine(input);
            return _testConsole.TotalProcessorTime.TotalSeconds < parser.TimeLimit;
        });

        if (TimeLimitExceeded(parser.TimeLimit))
        {
            watch.Stop();
            _testConsole.Kill();
            ReportThatTestTimedOut(result);
        }
        else
        {
            result.Status = GetProgramOutput() == parser.Expected ? ResultStatus.Passed : ResultStatus.Failed;
            watch.Stop();
        }
    }
    catch (Exception)
    {
        result.Status = ResultStatus.Exception;
    }

    result.Elapsed = watch.Elapsed;
    return result;
}

the _testConsole is an Process adapter that wraps a regular .net process into something more workable. I do however have a hard time to catch any exceptions from the started process (i.e. the catch statement is pointless here) I'm using something like:

_process = new Process
                           {
                               StartInfo =
                                   {
                                       FileName = pathToProcess,
                                       UseShellExecute = false,
                                       CreateNoWindow = true,
                                       RedirectStandardInput = true,
                                       RedirectStandardOutput = true,
                                       RedirectStandardError = true,
                                       Arguments = arguments
                                   }
                           };

to set up the process. Any ideas?

1条回答
▲ chillily
2楼-- · 2020-02-07 03:56

Exceptions don't flow from one process to another. The best you could do would be to monitor the exit code of the process - conventionally, an exit code of 0 represents success, and any other exit code represents an error.

Whether that's the case for the processes you're launching is a different matter, of course.

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