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Home/ Questions/Q 3308614
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 17, 20262026-05-17T21:32:32+00:00 2026-05-17T21:32:32+00:00

We have a WinForms desktop application, which is heavily multithreaded. 3 threads run with

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We have a WinForms desktop application, which is heavily multithreaded. 3 threads run with Application.Run and a bunch of other background worker threads. Getting all the threads to shut down properly was kind of tricky, but I thought I finally got it right.

But when we actually deployed the application, users started experiencing the application not exiting. There’s a System.Threading.Mutex to prevent them from running the app multiple times, so they have to go into task manager and kill the old one before they can run it again.

Every thread gets a Thread.Join before the main thread exits, and I added logging to each thread I spawn. According to the log, every single thread that starts also exits, and the main thread also exits. Even stranger, running SysInternals ProcessExplorer show all the threads disappear when the application exits. As in, there are 0 threads (managed or unmanaged), but the process is still running.

I can’t reproduce this on any developers computers or our test environment, and so far I’ve only seen it happen on Windows XP (not Vista or Windows 7 or any Windows Server). How can a process keep running with 0 threads?

Edit:

Here’s a bit more detail. One of event loops is hosting an Win32 interop DLL which uses a COM object to talk to a device driver. I put it in its own thread because the device driver is time sensitive, and whenever the UI thread would block for a significant amount of time (such as waiting for a database call to finish), it would interfere with the device driver.

So I changed the code so the main thread would do a Thread.Join with the device driver thread. That actually caused the application to lock up… it logs a few more calls on the UI thread after the Join completed and then everything stops. If the device is powered off, the driver never starts, and the problem goes away. So it looks like the driver must be responsible for keeping the application alive, even after it’s supposedly been shut down.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-17T21:32:33+00:00Added an answer on May 17, 2026 at 9:32 pm

    We never did figure out the root programmatic cause, but it was a specific driver version that caused the issue, and upgrading to a new driver fixed the problem.

    Unfortunately, this is all the answer I can give, if someone else someday runs into a similar problem…

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