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  4. How can I get handle (IntPtr) to a "sub"-form in another application?

How can I get handle (IntPtr) to a "sub"-form in another application?

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  • A arnold_w

    I made a dump of all windows using Spy++ and this what I got:

    Window 000C0678 "C:\\DummyRepo - Switch/Checkout - TortoiseGit" #32770 (Dialog)
    	Window 000B0670 "" ScrollBar
    	Window 00070482 "Switch To" Button
    	Window 001D065E "&Branch" Button
    	Window 000B01AE "" ComboBoxEx32
    		Window 0004036E "โด€่พ˜ศก" ComboBox
    	Window 0017069A "..." Button
    	Window 001303D2 "&Tag" Button
    	Window 000B04DE "" ComboBoxEx32
    		Window 001105D4 "" ComboBox
    	Window 00190620 "&Commit" Button
    	Window 000F06D8 "c288b35fcabf74c51270fff36db3387517beda53" ComboBoxEx32
    		Window 001406CE "โฑฐ่พ˜ศก" ComboBox
    			Window 001005CE "c288b35fcabf74c51270fff36db3387517beda53" Edit
    	Window 00220458 "..." Button
    	Window 00170604 "Option" Button
    	Window 000E0684 "Create &New Branch" Button
    	Window 002503EA "Branch\_c288b35f" Edit
    	Window 00390628 "Overwrite working tree changes (&force)" Button
    	Window 004404EE "&Merge" Button
    	Window 00300666 "T&rack" Button
    	Window 0040045C "&Override branch if exists" Button
    	Window 001404DC "OK" Button
    	Window 0008025E "Cancel" Button
    	Window 00220396 "Help" Button
    Window 00040616 "C:\\DummyRepo - Log Messages - TortoiseGit" #32770 (Dialog)
    	Window 000D04E6 "" Static
    	Window 002A0602 "" Static
    	Window 00040622 "master" Static
    	Window 002204CA "From:" Static
    	Window 001104C2 "2020-07-31" SysDateTimePick32
    	Window 001904A4 "To:" Static
    	Window 001A0496 "2020-07-31" SysDateTimePick32
    	Window 000F0560 "" Edit
    	Window 00080638 "Author Email" ComboBox
    	Window 000F01F2 "" Button
    	Window 001904B0 "" Button
    	Window 00190498 "" SysListView32
    		Window 00150422 "" SysHeader32
    	Window 00350426 "SHA-1: c288b35fcabf74c51270fff36db3387517beda53
    

    * 1
    " RICHEDIT50W
    Window 005B04E4 "" Static
    Window 001104F0 "" SysListView32
    Window 0013045E "" SysHeader32
    Window 004A06CA "Showing 2 revision(s), from revision c288b35f to revision b7a040a4 - 1 revision(s) selected, 0 file(s) selected; line: 1(+) 0(-) files: modified = 0 added = 1 deleted = 0 replaced = 0" Edit
    Window 0017060A "Show &Whole Project" Button
    Window 001705FC "&All Branches" Button
    Window 00290424 "" Edit
    Window 00460660 "Help" Button
    Window 0019048C "Refresh" Button
    Window 004A065C "S&tatistics" Button
    Window 000D036A "Walk Be&haviour" Button
    Window 00160492 "&View" Button
    Window 0016048E "OK" Button
    Window 004B069E "OK" Button
    Window 0024064A "" msctls_progress32
    Window 0004061A "" ScrollBar

    So, it seems the Switch/Checkout window is not<

    Richard Andrew x64R Offline
    Richard Andrew x64R Offline
    Richard Andrew x64
    wrote on last edited by
    #7

    Isn't this the window you want?

    arnold_w wrote:

    Window 000C0678 "C:\DummyRepo - Switch/Checkout - TortoiseGit" #32770 (Dialog)

    The difficult we do right away... ...the impossible takes slightly longer.

    A 1 Reply Last reply
    0
    • Richard Andrew x64R Richard Andrew x64

      Isn't this the window you want?

      arnold_w wrote:

      Window 000C0678 "C:\DummyRepo - Switch/Checkout - TortoiseGit" #32770 (Dialog)

      The difficult we do right away... ...the impossible takes slightly longer.

      A Offline
      A Offline
      arnold_w
      wrote on last edited by
      #8

      Yes, absolutely. But I don't want to have to use Spy++ to find it, I want to be able to find it in my C# application, but the C# application appears to find this window instead:

      Window 00040616 "C:\DummyRepo - Log Messages - TortoiseGit" #32770 (Dialog)

      It would be ok if I can find both, but then I would need to somehow obtain the heading strings ("C:\DummyRepo - Log Messages - TortoiseGit" and "C:\DummyRepo - Switch/Checkout - TortoiseGit") so that I have a way to distinguish which window (or actually, dialog) is which.

      A 1 Reply Last reply
      0
      • A arnold_w

        Yes, absolutely. But I don't want to have to use Spy++ to find it, I want to be able to find it in my C# application, but the C# application appears to find this window instead:

        Window 00040616 "C:\DummyRepo - Log Messages - TortoiseGit" #32770 (Dialog)

        It would be ok if I can find both, but then I would need to somehow obtain the heading strings ("C:\DummyRepo - Log Messages - TortoiseGit" and "C:\DummyRepo - Switch/Checkout - TortoiseGit") so that I have a way to distinguish which window (or actually, dialog) is which.

        A Offline
        A Offline
        arnold_w
        wrote on last edited by
        #9

        Instead of using Process.MainWindowHandle (which only returns the "C:\DummyRepo - Log Messages - TortoiseGit" window) I guess I could iterate through all windows using the technique described in Winforms-How can I make MessageBox appear centered on MainForm? - Stack Overflow[^]. However, when I do so and log the window texts, I never find the strings "C:\DummyRepo - Log Messages - TortoiseGit" and "C:\DummyRepo - Switch/Checkout - TortoiseGit":

            \[DllImport("user32.dll", EntryPoint = "GetWindowText",
            ExactSpelling = false, CharSet = CharSet.Auto, SetLastError = true)\]
            public static extern int GetWindowText(IntPtr hWnd, StringBuilder lpWindowText, int nMaxCount);
        
            private bool checkWindow(IntPtr hWnd, IntPtr lp)
            {
                // Checks if is a dialog
                StringBuilder sb = new StringBuilder(260);
                GetClassName(hWnd, sb, sb.Capacity);
        
                // My added code to log all window texts
                StringBuilder strbTitle = new StringBuilder(255);
                int nLength = GetWindowText(hWnd, strbTitle, strbTitle.Capacity + 1);
                string strTitle = strbTitle.ToString();
                Debug.WriteLine("The window text is: " + strTitle);
        
                if (sb.ToString() != "#32770")
                {
                    return true;
                }
                return true;    // My modified code to check all windows
        

        The strings I find appear to be much more low-level, e.g "Form1", "MSCTFIME UI", "Default IME", etc. Does anybody know which function I should use instead to obtain the window headings, "C:\DummyRepo - Log Messages - TortoiseGit" and "C:\DummyRepo - Switch/Checkout - TortoiseGit"?

        Richard Andrew x64R 1 Reply Last reply
        0
        • A arnold_w

          Instead of using Process.MainWindowHandle (which only returns the "C:\DummyRepo - Log Messages - TortoiseGit" window) I guess I could iterate through all windows using the technique described in Winforms-How can I make MessageBox appear centered on MainForm? - Stack Overflow[^]. However, when I do so and log the window texts, I never find the strings "C:\DummyRepo - Log Messages - TortoiseGit" and "C:\DummyRepo - Switch/Checkout - TortoiseGit":

              \[DllImport("user32.dll", EntryPoint = "GetWindowText",
              ExactSpelling = false, CharSet = CharSet.Auto, SetLastError = true)\]
              public static extern int GetWindowText(IntPtr hWnd, StringBuilder lpWindowText, int nMaxCount);
          
              private bool checkWindow(IntPtr hWnd, IntPtr lp)
              {
                  // Checks if is a dialog
                  StringBuilder sb = new StringBuilder(260);
                  GetClassName(hWnd, sb, sb.Capacity);
          
                  // My added code to log all window texts
                  StringBuilder strbTitle = new StringBuilder(255);
                  int nLength = GetWindowText(hWnd, strbTitle, strbTitle.Capacity + 1);
                  string strTitle = strbTitle.ToString();
                  Debug.WriteLine("The window text is: " + strTitle);
          
                  if (sb.ToString() != "#32770")
                  {
                      return true;
                  }
                  return true;    // My modified code to check all windows
          

          The strings I find appear to be much more low-level, e.g "Form1", "MSCTFIME UI", "Default IME", etc. Does anybody know which function I should use instead to obtain the window headings, "C:\DummyRepo - Log Messages - TortoiseGit" and "C:\DummyRepo - Switch/Checkout - TortoiseGit"?

          Richard Andrew x64R Offline
          Richard Andrew x64R Offline
          Richard Andrew x64
          wrote on last edited by
          #10

          This is kind of a side point, but I see that your CheckWindow function will return true in any circumstance.

          The difficult we do right away... ...the impossible takes slightly longer.

          A 1 Reply Last reply
          0
          • A arnold_w

            I would like to show a WinForms MessageBox centered on top of another application's (TortoiseGit) "sub"-form, i.e. a form (the TortoiseGit checkout form) on top of the main form (the TortoiseGit log window). I am able to successfully find the process (TortoiseGitProc) and from there I can successfully get a MainWindowHandle to the main form, but how do get from there to the "sub"-form (the TortoiseGit checkout form)?

            Richard Andrew x64R Offline
            Richard Andrew x64R Offline
            Richard Andrew x64
            wrote on last edited by
            #11

            See if this SO answer helps: c# - How to enumerate all windows belonging to a particular process using .NET? - Stack Overflow[^] (Particularly the second answer.)

            The difficult we do right away... ...the impossible takes slightly longer.

            A 1 Reply Last reply
            0
            • Richard Andrew x64R Richard Andrew x64

              This is kind of a side point, but I see that your CheckWindow function will return true in any circumstance.

              The difficult we do right away... ...the impossible takes slightly longer.

              A Offline
              A Offline
              arnold_w
              wrote on last edited by
              #12

              Yes, I added the line

              return true; // My modified code to check all windows

              on purpose because I wanted to log all window texts. My goals was to find the particular window that has the window text "C:\DummyRepo - Switch/Checkout - TortoiseGit", but all I found was windows having window texts such as "Form1", "MSCTFIME UI" and "Default IME".

              1 Reply Last reply
              0
              • Richard Andrew x64R Richard Andrew x64

                See if this SO answer helps: c# - How to enumerate all windows belonging to a particular process using .NET? - Stack Overflow[^] (Particularly the second answer.)

                The difficult we do right away... ...the impossible takes slightly longer.

                A Offline
                A Offline
                arnold_w
                wrote on last edited by
                #13

                That's pretty much what I already do, I am able to get a bunch of windows but I can't tell which one corresponds to

                Window 000C0678 "C:\DummyRepo - Switch/Checkout - TortoiseGit" #32770 (Dialog)

                because I can't find any window that has the heading "C:\DummyRepo - Switch/Checkout - TortoiseGit" using GetWindowText. Now, on the other hand, the pure C# (no win32 pinvoke involved) property Process.MainWindowTitle seems to return the proper string, but I can only apply it to the de facto main window ("C:\DummyRepo - Log Messages - TortoiseGit"), not to the "secondary sibling"-window ("C:\DummyRepo - Switch/Checkout - TortoiseGit").

                Richard Andrew x64R 1 Reply Last reply
                0
                • A arnold_w

                  That's pretty much what I already do, I am able to get a bunch of windows but I can't tell which one corresponds to

                  Window 000C0678 "C:\DummyRepo - Switch/Checkout - TortoiseGit" #32770 (Dialog)

                  because I can't find any window that has the heading "C:\DummyRepo - Switch/Checkout - TortoiseGit" using GetWindowText. Now, on the other hand, the pure C# (no win32 pinvoke involved) property Process.MainWindowTitle seems to return the proper string, but I can only apply it to the de facto main window ("C:\DummyRepo - Log Messages - TortoiseGit"), not to the "secondary sibling"-window ("C:\DummyRepo - Switch/Checkout - TortoiseGit").

                  Richard Andrew x64R Offline
                  Richard Andrew x64R Offline
                  Richard Andrew x64
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #14

                  That's not what you're already doing. You must be looking at the first answer to the question. Look at the SECOND answer to the question on that page. The second answer uses the function EnumThreadWindows.

                  The difficult we do right away... ...the impossible takes slightly longer.

                  A 1 Reply Last reply
                  0
                  • Richard Andrew x64R Richard Andrew x64

                    That's not what you're already doing. You must be looking at the first answer to the question. Look at the SECOND answer to the question on that page. The second answer uses the function EnumThreadWindows.

                    The difficult we do right away... ...the impossible takes slightly longer.

                    A Offline
                    A Offline
                    arnold_w
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #15

                    Ahhh, you mean this:

                    const uint WM_GETTEXT = 0x000D;
                    StringBuilder message = new StringBuilder(1000);
                    SendMessage(handle, WM_GETTEXT, message.Capacity, message);

                    Yes, that works great!!! Thank you! This is the complete code:

                    public partial class Form1 : Form
                    {
                    public Form1()
                    {
                    InitializeComponent();
                    WindowWrapper parentForm = ProcessWindowsHelper.getHandleToAnotherProcessWindow("TortoiseGitProc", "Switch/Checkout");
                    MessageBoxEx.Show(parentForm, "Hello on top of TortoiseGit Switch/Checkout dialog");
                    }
                    }
                    public class ProcessWindowsHelper
                    {
                    private delegate bool EnumThreadWndProc(IntPtr hWnd, IntPtr lp);
                    [DllImport("user32.dll")]
                    private static extern bool EnumThreadWindows(int tid, EnumThreadWndProc callback, IntPtr lp);
                    [DllImport("user32.dll", CharSet = CharSet.Auto)]
                    static extern IntPtr SendMessage(IntPtr hWnd, uint Msg, int wParam, StringBuilder lParam);
                    delegate bool EnumThreadDelegate(IntPtr hWnd, IntPtr lParam);

                    private const uint WM\_GETTEXT = 0x000D;
                    
                    public static WindowWrapper getHandleToAnotherProcessWindow(string processName, string substringInAnotherProcessWindow)
                    {
                        Process myProcess = findProcessByName(processName);
                        IEnumerable allHandlesInMyProcess = EnumerateProcessWindowHandles(myProcess.Id);
                        foreach (IntPtr handle in allHandlesInMyProcess)
                        {
                            StringBuilder message = new StringBuilder(1000);
                            SendMessage(handle, WM\_GETTEXT, message.Capacity, message);
                            if (message.ToString().Contains(substringInAnotherProcessWindow))
                            {
                                Debug.WriteLine(message);
                                return new WindowWrapper(handle);
                            }
                        }
                        return null;
                    }
                    
                    private static IEnumerable EnumerateProcessWindowHandles(int processId)
                    {
                        List handles = new List();
                        ProcessThreadCollection processThreadCollection = Process.GetProcessById(processId).Threads;
                        for (int i = 0; i < processThreadCollection.Count; i++)
                        {
                            ProcessThread thread;
                            thread = processThreadCollection\[i\];
                            EnumThreadWindows(thread.Id, 
                                delegate(IntPtr hWnd, IntPtr lParam)
                                {
                                    handles.Add(hWnd);
                                    return true;
                                }, 
                                IntPtr.Zero);
                        }
                        return handles;
                    }
                    
                    private static Process find
                    
                    Richard Andrew x64R A 2 Replies Last reply
                    0
                    • A arnold_w

                      Ahhh, you mean this:

                      const uint WM_GETTEXT = 0x000D;
                      StringBuilder message = new StringBuilder(1000);
                      SendMessage(handle, WM_GETTEXT, message.Capacity, message);

                      Yes, that works great!!! Thank you! This is the complete code:

                      public partial class Form1 : Form
                      {
                      public Form1()
                      {
                      InitializeComponent();
                      WindowWrapper parentForm = ProcessWindowsHelper.getHandleToAnotherProcessWindow("TortoiseGitProc", "Switch/Checkout");
                      MessageBoxEx.Show(parentForm, "Hello on top of TortoiseGit Switch/Checkout dialog");
                      }
                      }
                      public class ProcessWindowsHelper
                      {
                      private delegate bool EnumThreadWndProc(IntPtr hWnd, IntPtr lp);
                      [DllImport("user32.dll")]
                      private static extern bool EnumThreadWindows(int tid, EnumThreadWndProc callback, IntPtr lp);
                      [DllImport("user32.dll", CharSet = CharSet.Auto)]
                      static extern IntPtr SendMessage(IntPtr hWnd, uint Msg, int wParam, StringBuilder lParam);
                      delegate bool EnumThreadDelegate(IntPtr hWnd, IntPtr lParam);

                      private const uint WM\_GETTEXT = 0x000D;
                      
                      public static WindowWrapper getHandleToAnotherProcessWindow(string processName, string substringInAnotherProcessWindow)
                      {
                          Process myProcess = findProcessByName(processName);
                          IEnumerable allHandlesInMyProcess = EnumerateProcessWindowHandles(myProcess.Id);
                          foreach (IntPtr handle in allHandlesInMyProcess)
                          {
                              StringBuilder message = new StringBuilder(1000);
                              SendMessage(handle, WM\_GETTEXT, message.Capacity, message);
                              if (message.ToString().Contains(substringInAnotherProcessWindow))
                              {
                                  Debug.WriteLine(message);
                                  return new WindowWrapper(handle);
                              }
                          }
                          return null;
                      }
                      
                      private static IEnumerable EnumerateProcessWindowHandles(int processId)
                      {
                          List handles = new List();
                          ProcessThreadCollection processThreadCollection = Process.GetProcessById(processId).Threads;
                          for (int i = 0; i < processThreadCollection.Count; i++)
                          {
                              ProcessThread thread;
                              thread = processThreadCollection\[i\];
                              EnumThreadWindows(thread.Id, 
                                  delegate(IntPtr hWnd, IntPtr lParam)
                                  {
                                      handles.Add(hWnd);
                                      return true;
                                  }, 
                                  IntPtr.Zero);
                          }
                          return handles;
                      }
                      
                      private static Process find
                      
                      Richard Andrew x64R Offline
                      Richard Andrew x64R Offline
                      Richard Andrew x64
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #16

                      Glad you got it sorted! ๐Ÿ˜‰

                      The difficult we do right away... ...the impossible takes slightly longer.

                      1 Reply Last reply
                      0
                      • A arnold_w

                        Ahhh, you mean this:

                        const uint WM_GETTEXT = 0x000D;
                        StringBuilder message = new StringBuilder(1000);
                        SendMessage(handle, WM_GETTEXT, message.Capacity, message);

                        Yes, that works great!!! Thank you! This is the complete code:

                        public partial class Form1 : Form
                        {
                        public Form1()
                        {
                        InitializeComponent();
                        WindowWrapper parentForm = ProcessWindowsHelper.getHandleToAnotherProcessWindow("TortoiseGitProc", "Switch/Checkout");
                        MessageBoxEx.Show(parentForm, "Hello on top of TortoiseGit Switch/Checkout dialog");
                        }
                        }
                        public class ProcessWindowsHelper
                        {
                        private delegate bool EnumThreadWndProc(IntPtr hWnd, IntPtr lp);
                        [DllImport("user32.dll")]
                        private static extern bool EnumThreadWindows(int tid, EnumThreadWndProc callback, IntPtr lp);
                        [DllImport("user32.dll", CharSet = CharSet.Auto)]
                        static extern IntPtr SendMessage(IntPtr hWnd, uint Msg, int wParam, StringBuilder lParam);
                        delegate bool EnumThreadDelegate(IntPtr hWnd, IntPtr lParam);

                        private const uint WM\_GETTEXT = 0x000D;
                        
                        public static WindowWrapper getHandleToAnotherProcessWindow(string processName, string substringInAnotherProcessWindow)
                        {
                            Process myProcess = findProcessByName(processName);
                            IEnumerable allHandlesInMyProcess = EnumerateProcessWindowHandles(myProcess.Id);
                            foreach (IntPtr handle in allHandlesInMyProcess)
                            {
                                StringBuilder message = new StringBuilder(1000);
                                SendMessage(handle, WM\_GETTEXT, message.Capacity, message);
                                if (message.ToString().Contains(substringInAnotherProcessWindow))
                                {
                                    Debug.WriteLine(message);
                                    return new WindowWrapper(handle);
                                }
                            }
                            return null;
                        }
                        
                        private static IEnumerable EnumerateProcessWindowHandles(int processId)
                        {
                            List handles = new List();
                            ProcessThreadCollection processThreadCollection = Process.GetProcessById(processId).Threads;
                            for (int i = 0; i < processThreadCollection.Count; i++)
                            {
                                ProcessThread thread;
                                thread = processThreadCollection\[i\];
                                EnumThreadWindows(thread.Id, 
                                    delegate(IntPtr hWnd, IntPtr lParam)
                                    {
                                        handles.Add(hWnd);
                                        return true;
                                    }, 
                                    IntPtr.Zero);
                            }
                            return handles;
                        }
                        
                        private static Process find
                        
                        A Offline
                        A Offline
                        arnold_w
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #17

                        Well, I guess no joy lasts forever... In case somebody is using bash.exe instead of TortoiseGit to Switch/Checkout, then I wanted to do the same thing with bash.exe as the parent form. But when I call

                        parentForm = ProcessWindowsHelper.getHandleToAnotherProcessWindow("bash", "MING")

                        then it seems the handles list inside the EnumerateProcessWindowHandles method doesn't get any elements.

                        private static IEnumerable EnumerateProcessWindowHandles(int processId)
                        {
                            List handles = new List();
                            ProcessThreadCollection processThreadCollection = Process.GetProcessById(processId).Threads;
                            for (int i = 0; i < processThreadCollection.Count; i++)
                            {
                                ProcessThread thread;
                                thread = processThreadCollection\[i\];
                                EnumThreadWindows(thread.Id, 
                                    delegate(IntPtr hWnd, IntPtr lParam)
                                    {
                                        handles.Add(hWnd);
                                        return true;
                                    }, 
                                    IntPtr.Zero);
                            }
                            return handles;
                        }
                        

                        The call to Process.GetProcessById(processId).Threads returns 3 threads, but nothing gets added to the handles list. Does anybody know why? When I look at the information in Spy++ I see the following:

                        Window OOOA9B72 "MINGW64:/c/dummyRepo" mintty

                        Windows Properties, General tab:

                        Window Caption: MINGW64:/c/dummyRepo
                        Window Handle: OOOA9B72
                        Window Proc: (Unavailable)(Unicode)
                        Rectangle: (86, 89)-(681, 466), 595x377
                        Restored Rect: (86, 89)-(681, 466), 595x377
                        Client Rect: (8, 31)-(570, 369), 562x338
                        Instance Handle 00400000
                        Menu Handle 00000000
                        User Data 00000000
                        Windows Bytes:

                        Richard Andrew x64R 1 Reply Last reply
                        0
                        • A arnold_w

                          Well, I guess no joy lasts forever... In case somebody is using bash.exe instead of TortoiseGit to Switch/Checkout, then I wanted to do the same thing with bash.exe as the parent form. But when I call

                          parentForm = ProcessWindowsHelper.getHandleToAnotherProcessWindow("bash", "MING")

                          then it seems the handles list inside the EnumerateProcessWindowHandles method doesn't get any elements.

                          private static IEnumerable EnumerateProcessWindowHandles(int processId)
                          {
                              List handles = new List();
                              ProcessThreadCollection processThreadCollection = Process.GetProcessById(processId).Threads;
                              for (int i = 0; i < processThreadCollection.Count; i++)
                              {
                                  ProcessThread thread;
                                  thread = processThreadCollection\[i\];
                                  EnumThreadWindows(thread.Id, 
                                      delegate(IntPtr hWnd, IntPtr lParam)
                                      {
                                          handles.Add(hWnd);
                                          return true;
                                      }, 
                                      IntPtr.Zero);
                              }
                              return handles;
                          }
                          

                          The call to Process.GetProcessById(processId).Threads returns 3 threads, but nothing gets added to the handles list. Does anybody know why? When I look at the information in Spy++ I see the following:

                          Window OOOA9B72 "MINGW64:/c/dummyRepo" mintty

                          Windows Properties, General tab:

                          Window Caption: MINGW64:/c/dummyRepo
                          Window Handle: OOOA9B72
                          Window Proc: (Unavailable)(Unicode)
                          Rectangle: (86, 89)-(681, 466), 595x377
                          Restored Rect: (86, 89)-(681, 466), 595x377
                          Client Rect: (8, 31)-(570, 369), 562x338
                          Instance Handle 00400000
                          Menu Handle 00000000
                          User Data 00000000
                          Windows Bytes:

                          Richard Andrew x64R Offline
                          Richard Andrew x64R Offline
                          Richard Andrew x64
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #18

                          Have you stepped through it in the debugger? Does it find the correct process? Which line of code is failing?

                          The difficult we do right away... ...the impossible takes slightly longer.

                          A 1 Reply Last reply
                          0
                          • Richard Andrew x64R Richard Andrew x64

                            Have you stepped through it in the debugger? Does it find the correct process? Which line of code is failing?

                            The difficult we do right away... ...the impossible takes slightly longer.

                            A Offline
                            A Offline
                            arnold_w
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #19

                            Yes, I stepped it. I first rewrote the method EnumerateProcessWindowHandles according to this:

                            private static List handles;

                            private static IEnumerable EnumerateProcessWindowHandles(int processId)
                            {
                            handles = new List();
                            ProcessThreadCollection processThreadCollection = Process.GetProcessById(processId).Threads;
                            for (int i = 0; i < processThreadCollection.Count; i++)
                            {
                            ProcessThread thread; // If I put a breakpoint here, the debugger stops 3 times
                            thread = processThreadCollection[i];
                            EnumThreadWindows(thread.Id, myDelegate, IntPtr.Zero);
                            }
                            return handles;
                            }

                            private static bool myDelegate(IntPtr hWnd, IntPtr lParam)
                            {
                            handles.Add(hWnd); // If I put a breakpoint here, then the debugger never stops
                            return true;
                            }

                            So, something seems to go wrong inside the call to EnumThreadWindows, but that's a Win32 function and I don't know how to put a breakpoint inside it or how to step through it.

                            Richard Andrew x64R 1 Reply Last reply
                            0
                            • A arnold_w

                              Yes, I stepped it. I first rewrote the method EnumerateProcessWindowHandles according to this:

                              private static List handles;

                              private static IEnumerable EnumerateProcessWindowHandles(int processId)
                              {
                              handles = new List();
                              ProcessThreadCollection processThreadCollection = Process.GetProcessById(processId).Threads;
                              for (int i = 0; i < processThreadCollection.Count; i++)
                              {
                              ProcessThread thread; // If I put a breakpoint here, the debugger stops 3 times
                              thread = processThreadCollection[i];
                              EnumThreadWindows(thread.Id, myDelegate, IntPtr.Zero);
                              }
                              return handles;
                              }

                              private static bool myDelegate(IntPtr hWnd, IntPtr lParam)
                              {
                              handles.Add(hWnd); // If I put a breakpoint here, then the debugger never stops
                              return true;
                              }

                              So, something seems to go wrong inside the call to EnumThreadWindows, but that's a Win32 function and I don't know how to put a breakpoint inside it or how to step through it.

                              Richard Andrew x64R Offline
                              Richard Andrew x64R Offline
                              Richard Andrew x64
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #20

                              You need to put a breakpoint inside the "myDelegate" callback to see if ANY windows are being found, not just ones that match your substring. But first, verify that it is indeed finding the correct process. Compare the ProcessId to the one shown by Task Manager. EDIT: I'm sorry I didn't see that you had already tried the breakpoint inside the callback. The only thing I can think of at this moment is to make sure it is finding the correct process.

                              The difficult we do right away... ...the impossible takes slightly longer.

                              A 1 Reply Last reply
                              0
                              • Richard Andrew x64R Richard Andrew x64

                                You need to put a breakpoint inside the "myDelegate" callback to see if ANY windows are being found, not just ones that match your substring. But first, verify that it is indeed finding the correct process. Compare the ProcessId to the one shown by Task Manager. EDIT: I'm sorry I didn't see that you had already tried the breakpoint inside the callback. The only thing I can think of at this moment is to make sure it is finding the correct process.

                                The difficult we do right away... ...the impossible takes slightly longer.

                                A Offline
                                A Offline
                                arnold_w
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #21

                                It is finding the right bash.exe process (there is only 1 running) and it successfully finds its 3 threads. As you said, the filtering with the substrings happens later and by then there are no handles at all to filter.

                                Richard Andrew x64R 1 Reply Last reply
                                0
                                • A arnold_w

                                  It is finding the right bash.exe process (there is only 1 running) and it successfully finds its 3 threads. As you said, the filtering with the substrings happens later and by then there are no handles at all to filter.

                                  Richard Andrew x64R Offline
                                  Richard Andrew x64R Offline
                                  Richard Andrew x64
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #22

                                  I have one last thing. I'm not familiar with bash, is it a command line program?

                                  The difficult we do right away... ...the impossible takes slightly longer.

                                  A 1 Reply Last reply
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                                  • Richard Andrew x64R Richard Andrew x64

                                    I have one last thing. I'm not familiar with bash, is it a command line program?

                                    The difficult we do right away... ...the impossible takes slightly longer.

                                    A Offline
                                    A Offline
                                    arnold_w
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #23

                                    Yes, I think it's some kind of command prompt that is standard for Unix systems, but it exists for Windows also. I've seen some of my colleagues (those that prefer typing over interacting with GUI:s) type

                                    $ git.exe checkout develop

                                    when they want to checkout in Git.

                                    Richard Andrew x64R 1 Reply Last reply
                                    0
                                    • A arnold_w

                                      Yes, I think it's some kind of command prompt that is standard for Unix systems, but it exists for Windows also. I've seen some of my colleagues (those that prefer typing over interacting with GUI:s) type

                                      $ git.exe checkout develop

                                      when they want to checkout in Git.

                                      Richard Andrew x64R Offline
                                      Richard Andrew x64R Offline
                                      Richard Andrew x64
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #24

                                      Bingo! That must be why you're not finding any Windows. I can think of two possibilities at this point. 1. It might be that you need to find bash's parent process and enumerate the windows of that process instead. 2. It might be that the Linux Subsystem is interfering somehow.

                                      The difficult we do right away... ...the impossible takes slightly longer.

                                      A 1 Reply Last reply
                                      0
                                      • Richard Andrew x64R Richard Andrew x64

                                        Bingo! That must be why you're not finding any Windows. I can think of two possibilities at this point. 1. It might be that you need to find bash's parent process and enumerate the windows of that process instead. 2. It might be that the Linux Subsystem is interfering somehow.

                                        The difficult we do right away... ...the impossible takes slightly longer.

                                        A Offline
                                        A Offline
                                        arnold_w
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #25

                                        When I closed my bash.exe command prompt, I could see that the following processes disappeared: backgroundTaskHost, bash, conhost, git-bash, mintty and RuntimeBroker. When I tried mintty instead of bash, then it worked great! Again, thanks for your help!

                                        Richard Andrew x64R 1 Reply Last reply
                                        0
                                        • A arnold_w

                                          When I closed my bash.exe command prompt, I could see that the following processes disappeared: backgroundTaskHost, bash, conhost, git-bash, mintty and RuntimeBroker. When I tried mintty instead of bash, then it worked great! Again, thanks for your help!

                                          Richard Andrew x64R Offline
                                          Richard Andrew x64R Offline
                                          Richard Andrew x64
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #26

                                          Happy to help! :)

                                          The difficult we do right away... ...the impossible takes slightly longer.

                                          1 Reply Last reply
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