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Home/ Questions/Q 767459
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 14, 20262026-05-14T18:01:48+00:00 2026-05-14T18:01:48+00:00

I have an unmanaged DLL with a function that can run for a long

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I have an unmanaged DLL with a function that can run for a long time if the input parameter is a large value, sometimes that is desirable but not always.

How can I in c# call this function so that I can abort it when needed?

So far I have tried to put the call in a separate thread, but neither interrupt nor abort seem to stop the process, which runs at 100% CPU until the dll is done.

Is it possible to terminate the running dll code?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-14T18:01:48+00:00Added an answer on May 14, 2026 at 6:01 pm

    Unmanaged code is only abortable if it is an “alertable wait state”. It won’t be when it is burning 100% cpu cycles. P/Invoking TerminateThread would work, assuming you could obtain the thread handle, which .NET makes very difficult. It won’t help anyway, you’ll leak the thread stack. At one megabyte, you’ll quickly run out of virtual memory. Even if this only an occasional need, you’re still liable to run into major problems since the thread has mutated global program state and you don’t know how to restore it.

    The only good way to abort unmanaged code is to run it in a separate process and shoot it in the head with Process.Kill(). The operating system will clean up the shrapnel. You’ll need to write a little hosting program for the DLL and use one of the process interop facilities to talk to it. Sockets, named pipes, .NET remoting, WCF, take your pick.

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