I've got a section of code that needs to be executed at form closing, but neither the closed or closing events work for me. The code needs to be executed BEFORE the form actually closes (it needs to gracefully stop some pending operations if they're in progress).
I of course can link this to...
Thanks rdgerken... i might have to look into that if I can't find a better programmatic solution.
obislavu: I've got the right privelages. Did you try that code and it worked for you?
Thanks for the help guys... it's very much appreciated!
Thanks for the reply. I may have to consider your first example, but would like to avoid it at all costs as that would be a security breach.
I am not able to get your second example to work however. I tried something similar to this before posting. The framework's process class doesnt seem...
I work in tech support and I need to be able to build the functionality of killing a process that's running on a remote pc into my c# apps.
Any thoughts? The process class doesnt seem to allow this...
Well i was able to figure out my problem... turns out it didnt have anything to do with invoking or multithreading.
But it would still be nice to know how to invoke methods with parameters if someone knows how!
Thanks!!
I've got a program that does a search using directory services, and the problem i'm having is returning the results. I moved the search to a background thread (using System.Threading.Thread) so that it can be cancelled, gui remains responsive, etc.
I've defined an event called itemFound that...
I'm working on an active directory tool for use in tech support at my corporation. What i'd like to be able to do... is have this program launch the actual Active Directory Users and Computers snap-in, to a specific item in AD. Is this possible? I've got the path to the item i want in AD...
Is there a way I can write a search function using DirectoryServices that will return only results located within a specific organizational unit in active directory?
The idea being to write a search function that will return, say, a list of all domain controllers for a domain (they all reside...
Is that something that can be changed by the program at runtime? Obviously that would be a security flaw if it could just give itself permissions to do anything... but perhaps with a username/pass of an account with administrator access?
Thanks for the replies Rick... your input is much...
I may have to look into the touchless deployment idea... but I dont see how I could even implement a self updating version. I doubt it would let me copy a file with the level of security that's being afforded to my app.
It won't even let me do an Application.Exit() when it's not on the local...
Hmm. That's interesting... but wouldnt it throw another exception when it tried to copy the file locally?
It seems like there's got to be a way where I can correct the error programmatically... this is a big issue with the .NET framework in my mind if not. Even if I have to give it a...
Hmm. What do you mean by self updating Rick? And where did you say that code was? (Yes, running it locally works, Dalchi). I'd like to stay away from running it locally (that will decrease robustness, but works for now as a workaround), as well as including a set up program for the same...
I've got a utility i'm trying to write that makes some modifications to the system registry, as well as opening a database stored on a network share.
This utility is going to be used by multiple people, and thus is going to reside on a server. Users will then browse to the server and run the...
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