IHttpServer::IncrementThreadCount Method
Increments the thread count for the thread pool.
Syntax
virtual VOID IncrementThreadCount(
VOID
) = 0;
Parameters
This method takes no parameters.
Return Value
VOID
.
Remarks
The IncrementThreadCount
method increases count of available threads for the thread pool by a single thread. The count will not exceed the maximum limit for the thread pool of 256 threads.
Note
IncrementThreadCount
does not actually increase the number of threads in use; only the thread count is affected.
When you are developing an HTTP module that performs operations that require a long time to process, your HTTP module could call IncrementThreadCount
to increase the available threads for the thread pool while your module executes your long-running operations. When the module is finished, it would call IIHttpServer::DecrementThreadCount to restore the thread count.
Example
The following code example demonstrates how to create an HTTP module that calls IncrementThreadCount
to increase the thread count for the thread pool and then sleeps for 30 seconds. The module then calls DecrementThreadCount
to restore the thread count and exits.
#define _WINSOCKAPI_
#include <windows.h>
#include <sal.h>
#include <httpserv.h>
// Create a pointer for the global server interface.
IHttpServer * g_pHttpServer = NULL;
// Create the module class.
class MyHttpModule : public CHttpModule
{
public:
REQUEST_NOTIFICATION_STATUS
OnBeginRequest(
IN IHttpContext * pHttpContext,
IN IHttpEventProvider * pProvider
)
{
UNREFERENCED_PARAMETER( pHttpContext );
UNREFERENCED_PARAMETER( pProvider );
// Increment the thread count.
g_pHttpServer->IncrementThreadCount();
// Sleep for 30 seconds.
Sleep(30 * 1000);
// Decrement the thread count.
g_pHttpServer->DecrementThreadCount();
// Return processing to the pipeline.
return RQ_NOTIFICATION_CONTINUE;
}
};
// Create the module's class factory.
class MyHttpModuleFactory : public IHttpModuleFactory
{
public:
HRESULT
GetHttpModule(
OUT CHttpModule ** ppModule,
IN IModuleAllocator * pAllocator
)
{
UNREFERENCED_PARAMETER( pAllocator );
// Create a new instance.
MyHttpModule * pModule = new MyHttpModule;
// Test for an error.
if (!pModule)
{
// Return an error if the factory cannot create the instance.
return HRESULT_FROM_WIN32( ERROR_NOT_ENOUGH_MEMORY );
}
else
{
// Return a pointer to the module.
*ppModule = pModule;
pModule = NULL;
// Return a success status.
return S_OK;
}
}
void Terminate()
{
// Remove the class from memory.
delete this;
}
};
// Create the module's exported registration function.
HRESULT
__stdcall
RegisterModule(
DWORD dwServerVersion,
IHttpModuleRegistrationInfo * pModuleInfo,
IHttpServer * pGlobalInfo
)
{
UNREFERENCED_PARAMETER( dwServerVersion );
// Store the pointer for the global server interface.
g_pHttpServer = pGlobalInfo;
// Set the request notifications and exit.
return pModuleInfo->SetRequestNotifications(
new MyHttpModuleFactory,
RQ_BEGIN_REQUEST,
0
);
}
Your module must export the RegisterModule function. You can export this function by creating a module definition (.def) file for your project, or you can compile the module by using the /EXPORT:RegisterModule
switch. For more information, see Walkthrough: Creating a Request-Level HTTP Module By Using Native Code.
You can optionally compile the code by using the __stdcall (/Gz)
calling convention instead of explicitly declaring the calling convention for each function.
Requirements
Type | Description |
---|---|
Client | - IIS 7.0 on Windows Vista - IIS 7.5 on Windows 7 - IIS 8.0 on Windows 8 - IIS 10.0 on Windows 10 |
Server | - IIS 7.0 on Windows Server 2008 - IIS 7.5 on Windows Server 2008 R2 - IIS 8.0 on Windows Server 2012 - IIS 8.5 on Windows Server 2012 R2 - IIS 10.0 on Windows Server 2016 |
Product | - IIS 7.0, IIS 7.5, IIS 8.0, IIS 8.5, IIS 10.0 - IIS Express 7.5, IIS Express 8.0, IIS Express 10.0 |
Header | Httpserv.h |
See Also
IHttpServer Interface
IHttpServer::DecrementThreadCount Method