Application Lifetimes
Not all platforms are created equal! For example, the lifetime management that you may be using to developing with in Windows Forms or WPF can operate only on desktop-style platforms. Avalonia UI is a cross-platform framework; so to make your application portable, it provides several different lifetime models for your application, and also allows you to control everything manually if the target platform permits.
How do lifetimes work?
For a desktop application, you initialise like this:
class Program
{
// This method is needed for IDE previewer infrastructure
public static AppBuilder BuildAvaloniaApp()
=> AppBuilder.Configure<App>().UsePlatformDetect();
// The entry point. Things aren't ready yet, so at this point
// you shouldn't use any Avalonia types or anything that expects
// a SynchronizationContext to be ready
public static int Main(string[] args)
=> BuildAvaloniaApp().StartWithClassicDesktopLifetime(args);
}
Then the main window is created in the Application
class:
public override void OnFrameworkInitializationCompleted()
{
if (ApplicationLifetime
is IClassicDesktopStyleApplicationLifetime desktop)
desktop.MainWindow = new MainWindow();
else if (ApplicationLifetime
is ISingleViewApplicationLifetime singleView)
singleView.MainView = new MainView();
base.OnFrameworkInitializationCompleted();
}
This method is called when the framework has initilized and the ApplicationLifetime
property contains the chosen lifetime if any.
If you run the application in design mode (this uses the IDE previewer process), then ApplicationLifetime
is null.
Lifetime Interfaces
Avalonia UI provides a range of interfaces to allow you to choose a level of control that is suitable for your application. These are provided by the BuildAvaloniaApp().Start[Something]
family of methods.
IControlledApplicationLifetime
Provided by:
StartWithClassicDesktopLifetime
StartLinuxFramebuffer
Allows you to subscribe to Startup
and Exit
events and permits explicitly shutting down of the application by calling the Shutdown
method. This interface gives you control of the application's exit procedures.
IClassicDesktopStyleApplicationLifetime
Inherits: IControlledApplicationLifetime
Provided by:
StartWithClassicDesktopLifetime
Allows you to control your application lifetime in the manner of a Windows Forms or WPF application. This interface provides a way to access the list of the currently opened windows, to set a main window, and has three shutdown modes:
OnLastWindowClose
- shuts down the application when the last window is closedOnMainWindowClose
- shuts down the application when the main window is closed (if it has been set).OnExplicitShutdown
- disables automatic shutdown of the application, you need to call theShutdown
method in your code.
ISingleViewApplicationLifetime
Provided by:
StartLinuxFramebuffer
- mobile platforms
Some platforms do not have a concept of a desktop main window and only allow one view on the device's screen at a time. For these platforms the lifetime allows you to set and change the main view class (MainView
) instead.
To implement the navigation stack on platforms like this (with a single main view), you can use ReactiveUI routing or another routing control.
Manual Lifetime Management
If you need to, you can take full control of your application's lifetime management. For example on a desktop platform you can pass a delegate to AppMain
to the BuildAvaloniaApp.Start
method, and then manage things manually from there:
class Program
{
// This method is needed for IDE previewer infrastructure
public static AppBuilder BuildAvaloniaApp()
=> AppBuilder.Configure<App>().UsePlatformDetect();
// The entry point. Things aren't ready yet, so at this point
// you shouldn't use any Avalonia types or anything that expects
// a SynchronizationContext to be ready
public static int Main(string[] args)
=> BuildAvaloniaApp().Start(AppMain, args);
// Application entry point. Avalonia is completely initialized.
static void AppMain(Application app, string[] args)
{
// A cancellation token source that will be
// used to stop the main loop
var cts = new CancellationTokenSource();
// Do your startup code here
new Window().Show();
// Start the main loop
app.Run(cts.Token);
}
}