Question

I was looking at the example in Microsoft KB318804 but they use the threadId of the "current" application!!! I have some C++ code which works but we have to rewrite it, and I would prefer to re-write in C# while I am in there. The one thing it does is get the threadId of the target application like so:

uint lastId = GetWindowThreadProcessId(targetHandle, IntPtr.Zero);

no, GetCurrentThread is not the correct call as I am getting the thread id of a remote application which is what we do today AND what we want to do. targetHandle is a handle to that remote application.

I cast this lastId to an int and tried to wire up C# code but the SetWindowsHookEx returns 0 and fails. Only AppDomain.GetCurrentThreadId() seems to work (even though it is deprecated, the replacement though doesn't work either).

Do I have to go with the C++ code then? or is there a way to get it to work in C#?

Currently we register the hookhandler in C++ with the other application and get events back.

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Solution

Have you checked out the pinvoke.net entry for SetWindowsHookEx?

If SetWindowsHookEx returns NULL, you are supposed to call GetLastError, so in C# you should call Marshal.GetLastWin32Error (Assuming that DllImportAttribute.SetLastError was included on the P/Invoke signature.)

From pinvoke.net:

Signature

[DllImport("user32.dll", SetLastError = true)]
static extern IntPtr SetWindowsHookEx(HookType hookType, HookProc lpfn, IntPtr hMod, uint dwThreadId);

Calling

IntPtr hHook;

using (Process process = Process.GetCurrentProcess())
using (ProcessModule module = process.MainModule)
{
    IntPtr hModule = GetModuleHandle(module.ModuleName);

    hHook = SetWindowsHookEx(HookType.WH_KEYBOARD_LL, hook, hModule, 0);
}

Possibly related questions:

OTHER TIPS

Use this kernel32 call to get the current thread id:

    [DllImport("Kernel32.dll", CharSet = CharSet.Auto)]
    public static extern int GetCurrentThreadId();
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