// Get the computer name of a DC for the domain.
if ( NetGetDCName( NULL, wszDomain, &ComputerName ) != NERR_Success )
{
- wxLogError(wxT("Can not find domain controller"));
+ wxLogError(wxT("Cannot find domain controller"));
goto error;
}
//
// TODO: add checks for the other compilers (and update wxSetEnv()
// documentation in interface/wx/utils.h accordingly)
-#if defined(__VISUALC__)
+#if defined(__VISUALC__) || defined(__MINGW32__)
// notice that Microsoft _putenv() has different semantics from POSIX
// function with almost the same name: in particular it makes a copy of the
// string instead of using it as part of environment so we can safely call
wxON_BLOCK_EXIT1(::CloseHandle, hProcess);
+ // Default timeout for waiting for the process termination after killing
+ // it. It should be long enough to allow the process to terminate even on a
+ // busy system but short enough to avoid blocking the main thread for too
+ // long.
+ DWORD waitTimeout = 500; // ms
+
bool ok = true;
switch ( sig )
{
break;
case wxSIGNONE:
- // do nothing, we just want to test for process existence
- if ( krc )
- *krc = wxKILL_OK;
- return 0;
+ // Opening the process handle may succeed for a process even if it
+ // doesn't run any more (typically because open handles to it still
+ // exist elsewhere, possibly in this process itself if we're
+ // killing a child process) so we still need check if it hasn't
+ // terminated yet but, unlike when killing it, we don't need to
+ // wait for any time at all.
+ waitTimeout = 0;
+ break;
default:
// any other signal means "terminate"
}
// the return code
- DWORD rc wxDUMMY_INITIALIZE(0);
if ( ok )
{
// as we wait for a short time, we can use just WaitForSingleObject()
// and not MsgWaitForMultipleObjects()
- switch ( ::WaitForSingleObject(hProcess, 500 /* msec */) )
+ switch ( ::WaitForSingleObject(hProcess, waitTimeout) )
{
case WAIT_OBJECT_0:
- // process terminated
- if ( !::GetExitCodeProcess(hProcess, &rc) )
+ // Process terminated: normally this indicates that we
+ // successfully killed it but when testing for the process
+ // existence, this means failure.
+ if ( sig == wxSIGNONE )
{
- wxLogLastError(wxT("GetExitCodeProcess"));
+ if ( krc )
+ *krc = wxKILL_NO_PROCESS;
+
+ ok = false;
}
break;
// fall through
case WAIT_TIMEOUT:
- if ( krc )
- *krc = wxKILL_ERROR;
+ // Process didn't terminate: normally this is a failure but not
+ // when we're just testing for its existence.
+ if ( sig != wxSIGNONE )
+ {
+ if ( krc )
+ *krc = wxKILL_ERROR;
- rc = STILL_ACTIVE;
+ ok = false;
+ }
break;
}
}
// the return code is the same as from Unix kill(): 0 if killed
// successfully or -1 on error
- if ( !ok || rc == STILL_ACTIVE )
+ if ( !ok )
return -1;
if ( krc )