calling GetOpenFileName in plugin in FireFox - firefox

I wrote plugin for FireFox which offer method for choosing file. This method calls Win API function GetOpenFileName. When dialog "Open File" is shown and I do not switch to other window then all works ok. If I clicks browser window then all is blocked and after some time I see message that plugin has crashed. This problem is only in FireFox and is absent in Chrome and Safari. I think it is connected with fact that GetOpenFileName has own message loop.
Is there simple way to correct this behaviour?
e.g. function SHBrowseForFolder works fine in FireFox.
In FireFox sources I see class MessageLoop and methods SetNestableTasksAllowed() which probably can solve this problem (at least this conclusion can be done from explanation in header). But in xulrunner-sdk-13.0.1 there is no header with class MessageLoop although there is xul.lib with function GetIOMessageLoop. Probably it is possible to take headers from FireFox sources but I think it will not be easy to use them in my project in VS 2010

The main thing you need to understand here is that you must never block the main thread in an NPAPI plugin. The functions you're talking about are all blocking calls, so you must never use them on the main thread.
If you call them on a different thread your problem should go away; note that when you do this you'll probably want to have a callback function (javascript functions come in as a NPObject that you can call InvokeDefault on) and you can only call NPN_InvokeDefault on the main thread, so you'll have to device a way to do the callback on the main thread.

Related

UFT - Object Identification not working on Run Time

I have written a code for Web page. The process requires me to click on a weblink which opens up a new window, then perform some operations on the browser window. Then I close the new browser. This is repeated multiple times in the code. All the elements on all the browser windows are normally identifiable using the object spy. However, intermittently during run time when a new browser window opens up the elements on the page are not getting recognized (hence it throws errors). When i go into the debug mode and try using the object spy the maximum identification i can capture is Browser(<>).Page(<>). Nothing in the page is getting recognized.
Now if i close this browser and reopen it and check again, the elements on the page are getting captured by the object spy and i can continue with my script execution. Sometimes I have to close and reopen multiple times for it to work.
Is there any way to handle this scenario. check for object identifications on the run time maybe. Dunno if it this is any relevant but i am not making use of the OR in my project.
Thanks in advance.
This sounds like a bug in UFT and you should contact HP's support.
A workaround if you know where the problem is probable to appear is to add Browser("<name>").RefreshWebSupport. This is an undocumented feature of UFT that sometimes helps in cases like this.

MessageBox prevents exiting from application

Our application loads 3rd party DLLs that sometimes pops MessageBoxes.
We've notices that sometimes we can't just use exit(0) when there's an open MessageBox.
How can we still force an exist in such a case?
Thanks
Seems like your ugly DLL calls MessageBox (or whatever) from within DLL_THREAD_DETACH or DLL_PROCESS_DETACH.
If this happens in the same thread (i.e. the thread the calls exit) you may try to call PostQuitMessage right before the application exit. This should abort any message loop. If this happens in another thread - you may call PostThreadMessage.
There's also an option to intercept calls to Win32 API functions by hooking the appropriate module (Exe/Dll) import table. Invented by J.Richter (if I remember correctly). http://www.player.idv.tw/prog/index.php/APIHook
If you want to use brute force you may call the TerminateProcess() function. I'm not sure this is a good idea, you may want to detect if there's an open message box and send a close to it (for example using a FindWindow())
Take a look at MSDN.

Detecting creation of a MessageBox

My application is loading 3rd party DLLs, and some of this DLLs open MessageBox windows.
Is there a way for me to detect when such a window was being opened?
You'll need a CBT hook to receive a notification when a MessageBox window is displayed. You install this by calling the SetWindowsHookEx() function and specifying WH_CBT for the hook ID parameter. The hook callback function will provide you a handle to the MessageBox window, which you can then use to close it.
If you know exactly when to expect the MessageBox is being created and shown, then you can adopt a lighter and simpler approach than a global hook. This would involve calling the FindWindowEx function to get a handle to the MessageBox window, which you can likewise use to close it.
Of course, to close it properly, you will need to know which type of MessageBox it is (that is, which of the standard button choices that it displays) so that you can simulate a click of the desired button. Simply managing to get the MessageBox to disappear off of the screen without providing a valid answer is highly likely to have unexpected results in terms of the library code.
It bears explicit mention that this is really bad behavior on the part of a DLL. Unless absolutely necessary, ditch whatever 3rd party that is foisting such poorly written code upon you. If it is absolutely necessary, well then that's a red flag: work hard to eliminate it as a necessity. You shouldn't have to write and maintain gobs of code to work around their inability to get the big obvious things right.

Crash after the second RichEdit initialization in x64

According to Using Rich Edit Controls I use RichEdit in such way:
MyControl::OnCreate()
{
handle = LoadLibrary(_T("Riched20.dll"));
}
MyControl::OnDestroy()
{
FreeLibrary(handle);
}
It works fine for win32 but recently I’ve built x64 configuration and now my control fails after the page reload.
I’ve noticed that if do this:
MyControl::OnCreate()
{
handle = LoadLibrary(_T("Riched20.dll"));
FreeLibrary(handle);
handle = LoadLibrary(_T("Riched20.dll"));
}
everything works fine.
I don't wish to put this code into production, so is there any suggestions about better solution/workaround?
Since the reported fault module is Richedit20.dll_unloaded it means you are unloading the DLL while code from it is still in use.
For example, if you still have a richedit window open when you (completely) free the DLL, you can see crashes like that as soon as anything triggers a call to the control's window-proc. This is because the control's window-proc was inside the unloaded DLL code.
It should be safe to call LoadLibrary and FreeLibrary multiple times (so long as the calls balance out), so I doubt that is the problem. It may just be triggering the problem. Also, the problem was there in 32-bit builds; you just got lucky and never triggered it.
OnDestroy is the wrong place to call FreeLibrary. There are several window messages which get sent to a window after WM_DESTROY (e.g. WM_NCDESTROY).
Child windows also still exist when OnDestroy is called. If the richedits are children of your control (rather than the control itself) then moving the FreeLibrary into OnNcDestroy may save you. (Child windows are destroyed by the time WM_NCDESTROY is called.) I'd still say it's not a good place to free the library, however.
So you definitely want to move your FreeLibrary call. I would move both it and the LoadLibrary completely out of the control itself. It's not normal to have controls which load/free libraries whenever an instance of them is created. Instead, have some static init/uninit code somewhere which loads the libraries you need once and for all and frees them when the application is shutting down.
(If your app only rarely uses the control then it might make sense to load/free the library only when windows using the control are active. That situation is rare, though. Usually you're better off just leaving the DLL loaded.)

Subscribe to Vista Events in .NET (e.g. Window Opened)

I am trying to build my own little toolbox for Vista.
One of the features is a "window placeing tool" which places the windows at saved position. Another tool I could imagine are extensions to firefox or thunderbird...
For these tools to work, I need them to be able to capture "Events" in Vista.
To give you a concrete example:
Explorer Opened New Window
User started Firefox
Mouse moved
For the mouse case, there are some examples for C#.
I also know about the directory watcher, nice little helper.
Want I now need is the "new window opened event"
Any idea how to monitor this, without iterating the current window list every 5 seconds (I already know how to get Windows using the DLLImports, and getting Processes using managed code. But I have no Event when the explorer process opens a new windows)
Thanks for your help,
Chris
What you're talking about doing is not simple by any stretch.
You're going to need to register a hook, and you're going to have to build a callback procedure that gets called within another process's execution context -- this is not going to be .NET code (probably C instead), and will have to be in a DLL. That callback procedure will get called every time a certain class of events happens. It will examine the events it receives and filter out the ones you're interested, then send your application the notifications you want (probably via PostMessage). You'll then tap in to your application's main message loop to intercept those messages, and from there you can fire a .NET Event, or whatever you want.
Writing hook callbacks is tricky stuff because the code gets run within another process, not your own, and the memory management and concurrency issues take a bit of forethought. For that same reason, it's not going to be done in C#. Ideally, though, this callback code will be very small and very fast, since it's going to get called so often.
Also note that while perfectly "legal" in Win32, these system hooks have an immense amount of power and are commonly used by malware to change the way your system works. For that reason, you may run afoul of antivirus software if you attempt to do this sort of thing on a customer's computer.
Also note that the far-reaching effects of system hooks also means that simple programming mistakes can take down your whole system, which you will probably discover for yourself at some point while debugging; so save everything before you hit "run".
Good luck!
EDIT
Did a bit more search to see if there's any way to write the hook proc in C#, and came up with this:
How to set a Windows hook in Visual C# .NET
This is almost what you're looking for, but not quite. Hook procedures can either be global (which means that they run on every application) or thread (only runs within your application). The document states that:
Global hooks are not supported in the .NET Framework
Except for the
WH_KEYBOARD_LL low-level hook and the
WH_MOUSE_LL low-level hook, you cannot
implement global hooks in the
Microsoft .NET Framework. To install a
global hook, a hook must have a native
DLL export to inject itself in another
process that requires a valid,
consistent function to call into. This
behavior requires a DLL export. The
.NET Framework does not support DLL
exports. Managed code has no concept
of a consistent value for a function
pointer because these function
pointers are proxies that are built
dynamically.
Which means, again, to monitor things that go on outside your application's view, you need to set a global hook, which can't be written in .NET.
I have exactly the same issue as this, and I think I have a workable solution. Initially I looked into a similar option to the one mentioned by 'tylerl'. In my case however, instead of using 'SetWindowsHookEx', I attempted to use the similar function 'RegisterShellHookWindows'.
Unfortunately, this only succeeded in providing me with notifications of when a subset of windows are created/destroyed. The only windows which it provided notifications for are those shown on the taskbar.
Since I didn't fancy hacking into other processes, or writing the native code which would be required for SetWindowHookEx, I tried digging into the .NET automation APIs introduced in .NET 4.0, and I think this has the answer to your problem (at least as far as detecting when windows are opened / closed).
Here's a code snippet for using this API to detect windows being opened/closed:
using System.Windows.Automation;
private void StartMonitoringForWindowEvents()
{
Task.Factory.StartNew(() =>
{
AutomationEventHandler windowOpenedHandler = new AutomationEventHandler(OnWindowOpened);
System.Windows.Automation.Automation.AddAutomationEventHandler(
WindowPattern.WindowOpenedEvent, AutomationElement.RootElement,
TreeScope.Descendants, windowOpenedHandler);
});
}
private void OnWindowOpened(object source, AutomationEventArgs eventArgs)
{
try
{
AutomationElement sourceElement = (AutomationElement)source;
string message = string.Format(
"Automation.WindowOpened PID: {0}, Handle: {1}, Name:{2}",
sourceElement.Current.ProcessId,
sourceElement.Current.NativeWindowHandle,
sourceElement.Current.Name);
Debug.WriteLine(message);
// for each created window, register to watch for it being closed
RegisterForClosedWindowEvent(sourceElement);
}
catch
{
}
}
private void RegisterForClosedWindowEvent(AutomationElement element)
{
try
{
string elementName = element.Current.Name;
int processId = element.Current.ProcessId;
int nativeHandle = element.Current.NativeWindowHandle;
AutomationEventHandler windowClosedHandler = new AutomationEventHandler(
(ignoreSource, ignoreArgs) => OnWindowClosed(nativeHandle, processId, elementName));
System.Windows.Automation.Automation.AddAutomationEventHandler(
WindowPattern.WindowClosedEvent, element,
TreeScope.Element, windowClosedHandler);
}
catch
{
}
}
private void OnWindowClosed(int nativeHandle, int processId, string elementName)
{
string message = string.Format(
"Automation.WindowClosed PID: {0}, Handle: {1}, Name:{2}",
processId,
nativeHandle,
elementName);
Debug.WriteLine(message);
}
You will need to add a reference to the assemblies 'UIAutomationClient' and 'UIAutomationClientTypes'.
Here's a link to the MSDN documentation (you'll probably particularly want to take a look at the information on events):
http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms747327.aspx
Important implementation Notes:
1.) Notice that in the sample, I used a task factory to register for reception of the automation events. It's particularly important to avoid using the UI thread when registering for automation events or generally interacting with the automation APIs. Doing so can (and usually quickly does) result in a deadlock. Therefore, I use the task factory to ensure registration is done via the thread pool.
This also means, that the events will be received on the thread pool... So, if you need to perform any UI updates, you will have to marshal these across to the UI thread.
2.) You'll also note, that I capture any needed information on the element which may be closed, at the time of registration (using a closure). This is because, once the element is closed, we will no longer have access to this information - since the element has been destroyed.
Phil
The answer is not C# (or .Net) specific. You'll need to call SetWindowsHookEx( WH_CBT, ... ). This will allows to know when a window is created, destroyed, moved, sized, etc. You'll also need to get the relevant information from the window to identify if its one you need to do something about. Perhaps GetClassInfo, GetWindowLong, and GetWindowText.
The problem with the SetWindowsHookEx is that in order to get events from every window you need to have a separate win32 dll with the function in question exported. Although you might have success with the procedure outlined here.
To expand upon Joel Lucsy's answer, you need to use the Win32 API. However, there's a nice library, the Managed Windows API, that provides an object-oriented wrapper over common APIs. It may have what you need.

Resources