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Home/ Questions/Q 280291
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 12, 20262026-05-12T05:06:22+00:00 2026-05-12T05:06:22+00:00

session.identify is a third party COM API that I call and have no access

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“session.identify” is a third party COM API that I call and have no access to. It performs a server query that, somehow, locks up occasionally (and thus halts the main program which is waiting for the result).

My attempt was to wrap it in an AsyncDelegate so I would be able to give it a timeout and after expiration of the timeout allow the main program to proceed (similar to this one, just with a return value). However, it still locks up without the timeout having an effect.

Am I using the AsyncHandle.WaitOne incorrectly? Could there be something in the API that prevents it from being aborted?

private delegate void AsyncIdentifyCaller(CoAudioIdSignature signature, uint numResults, uint serverFlags , out IIdentifyResult result);

private IIdentifyResult identifyAndWait(CoAudioIdSession session, CoAudioIdSignature signature, uint numResults, out IIdentifyResult iresult)
{
    AsyncIdentifyCaller identifyDelegate = new AsyncIdentifyCaller(session.Identify);

    IAsyncResult result = identifyDelegate.BeginInvoke(
        signature,
        numResults,
        0,
        out iresult,
        null,
        null);

    // wait up to timeout [ms] and then continue without a proper result 
    int timeout = 30000;
    result.AsyncWaitHandle.WaitOne(timeout, false);

    identifyDelegate.EndInvoke(out iresult, result);

    return iresult;
}
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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-12T05:06:22+00:00Added an answer on May 12, 2026 at 5:06 am

    From what I can understand from http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/kzy257t0.aspx, you should have a logical check on the return value of WaitOne() method and wrap your logic around that

    You’re running the EndInvoke regardless if a timeout ocurrs or not, thus you’re getting the same timout errors from session.Identify.

    result.AsyncWaitHandle.WaitOne(timeout, false); // checks if theres is a timeout and returns true/false
    identifyDelegate.EndInvoke(out iresult, result); //code to run if WaitOne returns true
    

    You’d probably want to do this:

    if(result.AsyncWaitHandle.WaitOne(timeout))
    {
      identifyDelegate.EndInvoke(out iresult, result);
    }
    else
    {
      //timeout occurred
      //handle timeout
    }
    

    UPDATE:

    You might also like to check out this SO thread. The problem seems close to identical to yours. Also the accepted answer supplies a re-usable way to implement error-management

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