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- NSSM: The Non-Sucking Service Manager
- Version 2.24, 2014-08-31
- NSSM is a service helper program similar to srvany and cygrunsrv. It can
- start any application as an NT service and will restart the service if it
- fails for any reason.
- NSSM also has a graphical service installer and remover.
- Full documentation can be found online at
- http://nssm.cc/
- Since version 2.0, the GUI can be bypassed by entering all appropriate
- options on the command line.
- Since version 2.1, NSSM can be compiled for x64 platforms.
- Thanks Benjamin Mayrargue.
- Since version 2.2, NSSM can be configured to take different actions
- based on the exit code of the managed application.
- Since version 2.3, NSSM logs to the Windows event log more elegantly.
- Since version 2.5, NSSM respects environment variables in its parameters.
- Since version 2.8, NSSM tries harder to shut down the managed application
- gracefully and throttles restart attempts if the application doesn't run
- for a minimum amount of time.
- Since version 2.11, NSSM respects srvany's AppEnvironment parameter.
- Since version 2.13, NSSM is translated into French.
- Thanks François-Régis Tardy.
- Since version 2.15, NSSM is translated into Italian.
- Thanks Riccardo Gusmeroli.
- Since version 2.17, NSSM can try to shut down console applications by
- simulating a Control-C keypress. If they have installed a handler routine
- they can clean up and shut down gracefully on receipt of the event.
- Since version 2.17, NSSM can redirect the managed application's I/O streams
- to an arbitrary path.
- Since version 2.18, NSSM can be configured to wait a user-specified amount
- of time for the application to exit when shutting down.
- Since version 2.19, many more service options can be configured with the
- GUI installer as well as via the registry.
- Since version 2.19, NSSM can add to the service's environment by setting
- AppEnvironmentExtra in place of or in addition to the srvany-compatible
- AppEnvironment.
- Since version 2.22, NSSM can set the managed application's process priority
- and CPU affinity.
- Since version 2.22, NSSM can apply an unconditional delay before restarting
- an application which has exited.
- Since version 2.22, NSSM can rotate existing output files when redirecting I/O.
- Since version 2.22, NSSM can set service display name, description, startup
- type, log on details and dependencies.
- Since version 2.22, NSSM can manage existing services.
- Since version 2.25, NSSM can execute commands in response to service events.
- Usage
- -----
- In the usage notes below, arguments to the program may be written in angle
- brackets and/or square brackets. <string> means you must insert the
- appropriate string and [<string>] means the string is optional. See the
- examples below...
- Note that everywhere <servicename> appears you may substitute the
- service's display name.
- Installation using the GUI
- --------------------------
- To install a service, run
- nssm install <servicename>
- You will be prompted to enter the full path to the application you wish
- to run and any command line options to pass to that application.
- Use the system service manager (services.msc) to control advanced service
- properties such as startup method and desktop interaction. NSSM may
- support these options at a later time...
- Installation using the command line
- -----------------------------------
- To install a service, run
- nssm install <servicename> <application> [<options>]
- NSSM will then attempt to install a service which runs the named application
- with the given options (if you specified any).
- Don't forget to enclose paths in "quotes" if they contain spaces!
- If you want to include quotes in the options you will need to """quote""" the
- quotes.
- Managing the service
- --------------------
- NSSM will launch the application listed in the registry when you send it a
- start signal and will terminate it when you send a stop signal. So far, so
- much like srvany. But NSSM is the Non-Sucking service manager and can take
- action if/when the application dies.
- With no configuration from you, NSSM will try to restart itself if it notices
- that the application died but you didn't send it a stop signal. NSSM will
- keep trying, pausing between each attempt, until the service is successfully
- started or you send it a stop signal.
- NSSM will pause an increasingly longer time between subsequent restart attempts
- if the service fails to start in a timely manner, up to a maximum of four
- minutes. This is so it does not consume an excessive amount of CPU time trying
- to start a failed application over and over again. If you identify the cause
- of the failure and don't want to wait you can use the Windows service console
- (where the service will be shown in Paused state) to send a continue signal to
- NSSM and it will retry within a few seconds.
- By default, NSSM defines "a timely manner" to be within 1500 milliseconds.
- You can change the threshold for the service by setting the number of
- milliseconds as a REG_DWORD value in the registry at
- HKLM\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Services\<service>\Parameters\AppThrottle.
- Alternatively, NSSM can pause for a configurable amount of time before
- attempting to restart the application even if it successfully ran for the
- amount of time specified by AppThrottle. NSSM will consult the REG_DWORD value
- at HKLM\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Services\<service>\Parameters\AppRestartDelay
- for the number of milliseconds to wait before attempting a restart. If
- AppRestartDelay is set and the application is determined to be subject to
- throttling, NSSM will pause the service for whichever is longer of the
- configured restart delay and the calculated throttle period.
- If AppRestartDelay is missing or invalid, only throttling will be applied.
- NSSM will look in the registry under
- HKLM\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Services\<service>\Parameters\AppExit for
- string (REG_EXPAND_SZ) values corresponding to the exit code of the application.
- If the application exited with code 1, for instance, NSSM will look for a
- string value under AppExit called "1" or, if it does not find it, will
- fall back to the AppExit (Default) value. You can find out the exit code
- for the application by consulting the system event log. NSSM will log the
- exit code when the application exits.
- Based on the data found in the registry, NSSM will take one of three actions:
- If the value data is "Restart" NSSM will try to restart the application as
- described above. This is its default behaviour.
- If the value data is "Ignore" NSSM will not try to restart the application
- but will continue running itself. This emulates the (usually undesirable)
- behaviour of srvany. The Windows Services console would show the service
- as still running even though the application has exited.
- If the value data is "Exit" NSSM will exit gracefully. The Windows Services
- console would show the service as stopped. If you wish to provide
- finer-grained control over service recovery you should use this code and
- edit the failure action manually. Please note that Windows versions prior
- to Vista will not consider such an exit to be a failure. On older versions
- of Windows you should use "Suicide" instead.
- If the value data is "Suicide" NSSM will simulate a crash and exit without
- informing the service manager. This option should only be used for
- pre-Vista systems where you wish to apply a service recovery action. Note
- that if the monitored application exits with code 0, NSSM will only honour a
- request to suicide if you explicitly configure a registry key for exit code 0.
- If only the default action is set to Suicide NSSM will instead exit gracefully.
- Application priority
- --------------------
- NSSM can set the priority class of the managed application. NSSM will look in
- the registry under HKLM\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Services\<service>\Parameters
- for the REG_DWORD entry AppPriority. Valid values correspond to arguments to
- SetPriorityClass(). If AppPriority() is missing or invalid the
- application will be launched with normal priority.
- Processor affinity
- ------------------
- NSSM can set the CPU affinity of the managed application. NSSM will look in
- the registry under HKLM\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Services\<service>\Parameters
- for the REG_SZ entry AppAffinity. It should specify a comma-separated listed
- of zero-indexed processor IDs. A range of processors may optionally be
- specified with a dash. No other characters are allowed in the string.
- For example, to specify the first; second; third and fifth CPUs, an appropriate
- AppAffinity would be 0-2,4.
- If AppAffinity is missing or invalid, NSSM will not attempt to restrict the
- application to specific CPUs.
- Note that the 64-bit version of NSSM can configure a maximum of 64 CPUs in this
- way and that the 32-bit version can configure a maxium of 32 CPUs even when
- running on 64-bit Windows.
- Stopping the service
- --------------------
- When stopping a service NSSM will attempt several different methods of killing
- the monitored application, each of which can be disabled if necessary.
- First NSSM will attempt to generate a Control-C event and send it to the
- application's console. Batch scripts or console applications may intercept
- the event and shut themselves down gracefully. GUI applications do not have
- consoles and will not respond to this method.
- Secondly NSSM will enumerate all windows created by the application and send
- them a WM_CLOSE message, requesting a graceful exit.
- Thirdly NSSM will enumerate all threads created by the application and send
- them a WM_QUIT message, requesting a graceful exit. Not all applications'
- threads have message queues; those which do not will not respond to this
- method.
- Finally NSSM will call TerminateProcess() to request that the operating
- system forcibly terminate the application. TerminateProcess() cannot be
- trapped or ignored, so in most circumstances the application will be killed.
- However, there is no guarantee that it will have a chance to perform any
- tidyup operations before it exits.
- Any or all of the methods above may be disabled. NSSM will look for the
- HKLM\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Services\<service>\Parameters\AppStopMethodSkip
- registry value which should be of type REG_DWORD set to a bit field describing
- which methods should not be applied.
- If AppStopMethodSkip includes 1, Control-C events will not be generated.
- If AppStopMethodSkip includes 2, WM_CLOSE messages will not be posted.
- If AppStopMethodSkip includes 4, WM_QUIT messages will not be posted.
- If AppStopMethodSkip includes 8, TerminateProcess() will not be called.
- If, for example, you knew that an application did not respond to Control-C
- events and did not have a thread message queue, you could set AppStopMethodSkip
- to 5 and NSSM would not attempt to use those methods to stop the application.
- Take great care when including 8 in the value of AppStopMethodSkip. If NSSM
- does not call TerminateProcess() it is possible that the application will not
- exit when the service stops.
- By default NSSM will allow processes 1500ms to respond to each of the methods
- described above before proceeding to the next one. The timeout can be
- configured on a per-method basis by creating REG_DWORD entries in the
- registry under HKLM\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Services\<service>\Parameters.
- AppStopMethodConsole
- AppStopMethodWindow
- AppStopMethodThreads
- Each value should be set to the number of milliseconds to wait. Please note
- that the timeout applies to each process in the application's process tree,
- so the actual time to shutdown may be longer than the sum of all configured
- timeouts if the application spawns multiple subprocesses.
- To skip applying the above stop methods to all processes in the application's
- process tree, applying them only to the original application process, set the
- HKLM\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Services\<service>\Parameters\AppKillProcessTree
- registry value, which should be of type REG_DWORD, to 0.
- Console window
- --------------
- By default, NSSM will create a console window so that applications which
- are capable of reading user input can do so - subject to the service being
- allowed to interact with the desktop.
- Creation of the console can be suppressed by setting the integer (REG_DWORD)
- HKLM\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Services\<service>\Parameters\AppNoConsole
- registry value to 1.
- I/O redirection
- ---------------
- NSSM can redirect the managed application's I/O to any path capable of being
- opened by CreateFile(). This enables, for example, capturing the log output
- of an application which would otherwise only write to the console or accepting
- input from a serial port.
- NSSM will look in the registry under
- HKLM\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Services\<service>\Parameters for the keys
- corresponding to arguments to CreateFile(). All are optional. If no path is
- given for a particular stream it will not be redirected. If a path is given
- but any of the other values are omitted they will be receive sensible defaults.
- AppStdin: Path to receive input.
- AppStdout: Path to receive output.
- AppStderr: Path to receive error output.
- Parameters for CreateFile() are providing with the "AppStdinShareMode",
- "AppStdinCreationDisposition" and "AppStdinFlagsAndAttributes" values (and
- analogously for stdout and stderr).
- In general, if you want the service to log its output, set AppStdout and
- AppStderr to the same path, eg C:\Users\Public\service.log, and it should
- work. Remember, however, that the path must be accessible to the user
- running the service.
- File rotation
- -------------
- When using I/O redirection, NSSM can rotate existing output files prior to
- opening stdout and/or stderr. An existing file will be renamed with a
- suffix based on the file's last write time, to millisecond precision. For
- example, the file nssm.log might be rotated to nssm-20131221T113939.457.log.
- NSSM will look in the registry under
- HKLM\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Services\<service>\Parameters for REG_DWORD
- entries which control how rotation happens.
- If AppRotateFiles is missing or set to 0, rotation is disabled. Any non-zero
- value enables rotation.
- If AppRotateSeconds is non-zero, a file will not be rotated if its last write
- time is less than the given number of seconds in the past.
- If AppRotateBytes is non-zero, a file will not be rotated if it is smaller
- than the given number of bytes. 64-bit file sizes can be handled by setting
- a non-zero value of AppRotateBytesHigh.
- If AppRotateDelay is non-zero, NSSM will pause for the given number of
- milliseconds after rotation.
- If AppStdoutCopyAndTruncate or AppStderrCopyAndTruncate are non-zero, the
- stdout (or stderr respectively) file will be rotated by first taking a copy
- of the file then truncating the original file to zero size. This allows
- NSSM to rotate files which are held open by other processes, preventing the
- usual MoveFile() from succeeding. Note that the copy process may take some
- time if the file is large, and will temporarily consume twice as much disk
- space as the original file. Note also that applications reading the log file
- may not notice that the file size changed. Using this option in conjunction
- with AppRotateDelay may help in that case.
- Rotation is independent of the CreateFile() parameters used to open the files.
- They will be rotated regardless of whether NSSM would otherwise have appended
- or replaced them.
- NSSM can also rotate files which hit the configured size threshold while the
- service is running. Additionally, you can trigger an on-demand rotation by
- running the command
- nssm rotate <servicename>
- On-demand rotations will happen after the next line of data is read from
- the managed application, regardless of the value of AppRotateBytes. Be aware
- that if the application is not particularly verbose the rotation may not
- happen for some time.
- To enable online and on-demand rotation, set AppRotateOnline to a non-zero
- value.
- Note that online rotation requires NSSM to intercept the application's I/O
- and create the output files on its behalf. This is more complex and
- error-prone than simply redirecting the I/O streams before launching the
- application. Therefore online rotation is not enabled by default.
- Environment variables
- ---------------------
- NSSM can replace or append to the managed application's environment. Two
- multi-valued string (REG_MULTI_SZ) registry values are recognised under
- HKLM\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Services\<service>\Parameters.
- AppEnvironment defines a list of environment variables which will override
- the service's environment. AppEnvironmentExtra defines a list of
- environment variables which will be added to the service's environment.
- Each entry in the list should be of the form KEY=VALUE. It is possible to
- omit the VALUE but the = symbol is mandatory.
- Environment variables listed in both AppEnvironment and AppEnvironmentExtra
- are subject to normal expansion, so it is possible, for example, to update the
- system path by setting "PATH=C:\bin;%PATH%" in AppEnvironmentExtra. Variables
- are expanded in the order in which they appear, so if you want to include the
- value of one variable in another variable you should declare the dependency
- first.
- Because variables defined in AppEnvironment override the existing
- environment it is not possible to refer to any variables which were previously
- defined.
- For example, the following AppEnvironment block:
- PATH=C:\Windows\System32;C:\Windows
- PATH=C:\bin;%PATH%
- Would result in a PATH of "C:\bin;C:\Windows\System32;C:\Windows" as expected.
- Whereas the following AppEnvironment block:
- PATH=C:\bin;%PATH%
- Would result in a path containing only C:\bin and probably cause the
- application to fail to start.
- Most people will want to use AppEnvironmentExtra exclusively. srvany only
- supports AppEnvironment.
- As of version 2.25, NSSM parses AppEnvironment and AppEnvironmentExtra
- itself, before reading any other registry values. As a result it is now
- possible to refer to custom environment variables in Application,
- AppDirectory and other parameters.
- Merged service environment
- --------------------------
- All Windows services can be passed additional environment variables by
- creating a multi-valued string (REG_MULTI_SZ) registry value named
- HLKM\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Services\<service>\Environment.
- The contents of this environment block will be merged into the system
- environment before the service starts.
- Note, however, that the merged environment will be sorted alphabetically
- before being processed. This means that in practice you cannot set,
- for example, DIR=%PROGRAMFILES% in the Environment block because the
- environment passed to the service will not have defined %PROGRAMFILES%
- by the time it comes to define %DIR%. Environment variables defined in
- AppEnvironmentExtra do not suffer from this limitation.
- As of version 2.25, NSSM can get and set the Environment block using
- commands similar to:
- nssm get <servicename> Environment
- It is worth reiterating that the Environment block is available to all
- Windows services, not just NSSM services.
- Service startup environment
- ---------------------------
- The environment NSSM passes to the application depends on how various
- registry values are configured. The following flow describes how the
- environment is modified.
- By default:
- The service inherits the system environment.
- If <service>\Environment is defined:
- The contents of Environment are MERGED into the environment.
- If <service>\Parameters\AppEnvironment is defined:
- The service inherits the environment specified in AppEnvironment.
- If <service>\Parameters\AppEnvironmentExtra is defined:
- The contents of AppEnvironmentExtra are APPENDED to the environment.
- Note that AppEnvironment overrides the system environment and the
- merged Environment block. Note also that AppEnvironmentExtra is
- guaranteed to be appended to the startup environment if it is defined.
- Event hooks
- -----------
- NSSM can run user-configurable commands in response to application events.
- These commands are referred to as "hooks" below.
- All hooks are optional. Any hooks which are run will be launched with the
- environment configured for the service. NSSM will place additional
- variables into the environment which hooks can query to learn how and why
- they were called.
- Hooks are categorised by Event and Action. Some hooks are run synchronously
- and some are run asynchronously. Hooks prefixed with an *asterisk are run
- synchronously. NSSM will wait for these hooks to complete before continuing
- its work. Note, however, that ALL hooks are subject to a deadline after which
- they will be killed, regardless of whether they are run asynchronously
- or not.
- Event: Start - Triggered when the service is requested to start.
- *Action: Pre - Called before NSSM attempts to launch the application.
- Action: Post - Called after the application successfully starts.
- Event: Stop - Triggered when the service is requested to stop.
- *Action: Pre - Called before NSSM attempts to kill the application.
- Event: Exit - Triggered when the application exits.
- *Action: Post - Called after NSSM has cleaned up the application.
- Event: Rotate - Triggered when online log rotation is requested.
- *Action: Pre - Called before NSSM rotates logs.
- Action: Post - Called after NSSM rotates logs.
- Event: Power
- Action: Change - Called when the system power status has changed.
- Action: Resume - Called when the system has resumed from standby.
- Note that there is no Stop/Post hook. This is because Exit/Post is called
- when the application exits, regardless of whether it did so in response to
- a service shutdown request. Stop/Pre is only called before a graceful
- shutdown attempt.
- NSSM sets the environment variable NSSM_HOOK_VERSION to a positive number.
- Hooks can check the value of the number to determine which other environment
- variables are available to them.
- If NSSM_HOOK_VERSION is 1 or greater, these variables are provided:
- NSSM_EXE - Path to NSSM itself.
- NSSM_CONFIGURATION - Build information for the NSSM executable,
- eg 64-bit debug.
- NSSM_VERSION - Version of the NSSM executable.
- NSSM_BUILD_DATE - Build date of NSSM.
- NSSM_PID - Process ID of the running NSSM executable.
- NSSM_DEADLINE - Deadline number of milliseconds after which NSSM will
- kill the hook if it is still running.
- NSSM_SERVICE_NAME - Name of the service controlled by NSSM.
- NSSM_SERVICE_DISPLAYNAME - Display name of the service.
- NSSM_COMMAND_LINE - Command line used to launch the application.
- NSSM_APPLICATION_PID - Process ID of the primary application process.
- May be blank if the process is not running.
- NSSM_EVENT - Event class triggering the hook.
- NSSM_ACTION - Event action triggering the hook.
- NSSM_TRIGGER - Service control triggering the hook. May be blank if
- the hook was not triggered by a service control, eg Exit/Post.
- NSSM_LAST_CONTROL - Last service control handled by NSSM.
- NSSM_START_REQUESTED_COUNT - Number of times the application was
- requested to start.
- NSSM_START_COUNT - Number of times the application successfully started.
- NSSM_THROTTLE_COUNT - Number of times the application ran for less than
- the throttle period. Reset to zero on successful start or when the
- service is explicitly unpaused.
- NSSM_EXIT_COUNT - Number of times the application exited.
- NSSM_EXITCODE - Exit code of the application. May be blank if the
- application is still running or has not started yet.
- NSSM_RUNTIME - Number of milliseconds for which the NSSM executable has
- been running.
- NSSM_APPLICATION_RUNTIME - Number of milliseconds for which the
- application has been running since it was last started. May be blank
- if the application has not been started yet.
- Future versions of NSSM may provide more environment variables, in which
- case NSSM_HOOK_VERSION will be set to a higher number.
- Hooks are configured by creating string (REG_EXPAND_SZ) values in the
- registry named after the hook action and placed under
- HKLM\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Services\<service>\Parameters\AppEvents\<event>.
- For example the service could be configured to restart when the system
- resumes from standby by setting AppEvents\Power\Resume to:
- %NSSM_EXE% restart %NSSM_SERVICE_NAME%
- Note that NSSM will abort the startup of the application if a Start/Pre hook
- returns exit code of 99.
- A service will normally run hooks in the following order:
- Start/Pre
- Start/Post
- Stop/Pre
- Exit/Post
- If the application crashes and is restarted by NSSM, the order might be:
- Start/Pre
- Start/Post
- Exit/Post
- Start/Pre
- Start/Post
- Stop/Pre
- Exit/Post
- Managing services using the GUI
- -------------------------------
- NSSM can edit the settings of existing services with the same GUI that is
- used to install them. Run
- nssm edit <servicename>
- to bring up the GUI.
- NSSM offers limited editing capabilities for services other than those which
- run NSSM itself. When NSSM is asked to edit a service which does not have
- the App* registry settings described above, the GUI will allow editing only
- system settings such as the service display name and description.
- Managing services using the command line
- ----------------------------------------
- NSSM can retrieve or set individual service parameters from the command line.
- In general the syntax is as follows, though see below for exceptions.
- nssm get <servicename> <parameter>
- nssm set <servicename> <parameter> <value>
- Parameters can also be reset to their default values.
- nssm reset <servicename> <parameter>
- The parameter names recognised by NSSM are the same as the registry entry
- names described above, eg AppDirectory.
- NSSM offers limited editing capabilities for Services other than those which
- run NSSM itself. The parameters recognised are as follows:
- Description: Service description.
- DisplayName: Service display name.
- Environment: Service merged environment.
- ImagePath: Path to the service executable.
- ObjectName: User account which runs the service.
- Name: Service key name.
- Start: Service startup type.
- Type: Service type.
- These correspond to the registry values under the service's key
- HKLM\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Services\<service>.
- Note that NSSM will concatenate all arguments passed on the command line
- with spaces to form the value to set. Thus the following two invocations
- would have the same effect.
- nssm set <servicename> Description "NSSM managed service"
- nssm set <servicename> Description NSSM managed service
- Non-standard parameters
- -----------------------
- The AppEnvironment and AppEnvironmentExtra parameters recognise an
- additional argument when querying the environment. The following syntax
- will print all extra environment variables configured for a service
- nssm get <servicename> AppEnvironmentExtra
- whereas the syntax below will print only the value of the CLASSPATH
- variable if it is configured in the environment block, or the empty string
- if it is not configured.
- nssm get <servicename> AppEnvironmentExtra CLASSPATH
- When setting an environment block, each variable should be specified as a
- KEY=VALUE pair in separate command line arguments. For example:
- nssm set <servicename> AppEnvironment CLASSPATH=C:\Classes TEMP=C:\Temp
- The AppExit parameter requires an additional argument specifying the exit
- code to get or set. The default action can be specified with the string
- Default.
- For example, to get the default exit action for a service you should run
- nssm get <servicename> AppExit Default
- To get the exit action when the application exits with exit code 2, run
- nssm get <servicename> AppExit 2
- Note that if no explicit action is configured for a specified exit code,
- NSSM will print the default exit action.
- To set configure the service to stop when the application exits with an
- exit code of 2, run
- nssm set <servicename> AppExit 2 Exit
- The AppPriority parameter is used to set the priority class of the
- managed application. Valid priorities are as follows:
- REALTIME_PRIORITY_CLASS
- HIGH_PRIORITY_CLASS
- ABOVE_NORMAL_PRIORITY_CLASS
- NORMAL_PRIORITY_CLASS
- BELOW_NORMAL_PRIORITY_CLASS
- IDLE_PRIORITY_CLASS
- The DependOnGroup and DependOnService parameters are used to query or set
- the dependencies for the service. When setting dependencies, each service
- or service group (preceded with the + symbol) should be specified in
- separate command line arguments. For example:
- nssm set <servicename> DependOnService RpcSs LanmanWorkstation
- The Name parameter can only be queried, not set. It returns the service's
- registry key name. This may be useful to know if you take advantage of
- the fact that you can substitute the service's display name anywhere where
- the syntax calls for <servicename>.
- The ObjectName parameter requires an additional argument only when setting
- a username. The additional argument is the password of the user.
- To retrieve the username, run
- nssm get <servicename> ObjectName
- To set the username and password, run
- nssm set <servicename> ObjectName <username> <password>
- Note that the rules of argument concatenation still apply. The following
- invocation is valid and will have the expected effect.
- nssm set <servicename> ObjectName <username> correct horse battery staple
- The following well-known usernames do not need a password. The password
- parameter can be omitted when using them:
- "LocalSystem" aka "System" aka "NT Authority\System"
- "LocalService" aka "Local Service" aka "NT Authority\Local Service"
- "NetworkService" aka "Network Service" aka "NT Authority\Network Service"
- The Start parameter is used to query or set the startup type of the service.
- Valid service startup types are as follows:
- SERVICE_AUTO_START: Automatic startup at boot.
- SERVICE_DELAYED_START: Delayed startup at boot.
- SERVICE_DEMAND_START: Manual service startup.
- SERVICE_DISABLED: The service is disabled.
- Note that SERVICE_DELAYED_START is not supported on versions of Windows prior
- to Vista. NSSM will set the service to automatic startup if delayed start is
- unavailable.
- The Type parameter is used to query or set the service type. NSSM recognises
- all currently documented service types but will only allow setting one of two
- types:
- SERVICE_WIN32_OWN_PROCESS: A standalone service. This is the default.
- SERVICE_INTERACTIVE_PROCESS: A service which can interact with the desktop.
- Note that a service may only be configured as interactive if it runs under
- the LocalSystem account. The safe way to configure an interactive service
- is in two stages as follows.
- nssm reset <servicename> ObjectName
- nssm set <servicename> Type SERVICE_INTERACTIVE_PROCESS
- Controlling services using the command line
- -------------------------------------------
- NSSM offers rudimentary service control features.
- nssm start <servicename>
- nssm restart <servicename>
- nssm stop <servicename>
- nssm status <servicename>
- Removing services using the GUI
- -------------------------------
- NSSM can also remove services. Run
- nssm remove <servicename>
- to remove a service. You will prompted for confirmation before the service
- is removed. Try not to remove essential system services...
- Removing service using the command line
- ---------------------------------------
- To remove a service without confirmation from the GUI, run
- nssm remove <servicename> confirm
- Try not to remove essential system services...
- Logging
- -------
- NSSM logs to the Windows event log. It registers itself as an event log source
- and uses unique event IDs for each type of message it logs. New versions may
- add event types but existing event IDs will never be changed.
- Because of the way NSSM registers itself you should be aware that you may not
- be able to replace the NSSM binary if you have the event viewer open and that
- running multiple instances of NSSM from different locations may be confusing if
- they are not all the same version.
- Example usage
- -------------
- To install an Unreal Tournament server:
- nssm install UT2004 c:\games\ut2004\system\ucc.exe server
- To run the server as the "games" user:
- nssm set UT2004 ObjectName games password
- To configure the server to log to a file:
- nssm set UT2004 AppStdout c:\games\ut2004\service.log
- To restrict the server to a single CPU:
- nssm set UT2004 AppAffinity 0
- To remove the server:
- nssm remove UT2004 confirm
- To find out the service name of a service with a display name:
- nssm get "Background Intelligent Transfer Service" Name
- Building NSSM from source
- -------------------------
- NSSM is known to compile with Visual Studio 2008 and later. Older Visual
- Studio releases may or may not work if you install an appropriate SDK and
- edit the nssm.vcproj and nssm.sln files to set a lower version number.
- They are known not to work with default settings.
- NSSM will also compile with Visual Studio 2010 but the resulting executable
- will not run on versions of Windows older than XP SP2. If you require
- compatiblity with older Windows releases you should change the Platform
- Toolset to v90 in the General section of the project's Configuration
- Properties.
- Credits
- -------
- Thanks to Bernard Loh for finding a bug with service recovery.
- Thanks to Benjamin Mayrargue (www.softlion.com) for adding 64-bit support.
- Thanks to Joel Reingold for spotting a command line truncation bug.
- Thanks to Arve Knudsen for spotting that child processes of the monitored
- application could be left running on service shutdown, and that a missing
- registry value for AppDirectory confused NSSM.
- Thanks to Peter Wagemans and Laszlo Keresztfalvi for suggesting throttling
- restarts.
- Thanks to Eugene Lifshitz for finding an edge case in CreateProcess() and for
- advising how to build messages.mc correctly in paths containing spaces.
- Thanks to Rob Sharp for pointing out that NSSM did not respect the
- AppEnvironment registry value used by srvany.
- Thanks to Szymon Nowak for help with Windows 2000 compatibility.
- Thanks to François-Régis Tardy and Gildas le Nadan for French translation.
- Thanks to Emilio Frini for spotting that French was inadvertently set as
- the default language when the user's display language was not translated.
- Thanks to Riccardo Gusmeroli and Marco Certelli for Italian translation.
- Thanks to Eric Cheldelin for the inspiration to generate a Control-C event
- on shutdown.
- Thanks to Brian Baxter for suggesting how to escape quotes from the command
- prompt.
- Thanks to Russ Holmann for suggesting that the shutdown timeout be configurable.
- Thanks to Paul Spause for spotting a bug with default registry entries.
- Thanks to BUGHUNTER for spotting more GUI bugs.
- Thanks to Doug Watson for suggesting file rotation.
- Thanks to Арслан Сайдуганов for suggesting setting process priority.
- Thanks to Robert Middleton for suggestion and draft implementation of process
- affinity support.
- Thanks to Andrew RedzMax for suggesting an unconditional restart delay.
- Thanks to Bryan Senseman for noticing that applications with redirected stdout
- and/or stderr which attempt to read from stdin would fail.
- Thanks to Czenda Czendov for help with Visual Studio 2013 and Server 2012R2.
- Thanks to Alessandro Gherardi for reporting and draft fix of the bug whereby
- the second restart of the application would have a corrupted environment.
- Thanks to Hadrien Kohl for suggesting to disable the console window's menu.
- Thanks to Allen Vailliencourt for noticing bugs with configuring the service to
- run under a local user account.
- Thanks to Sam Townsend for noticing a regression with TerminateProcess().
- Thanks to Barrett Lewis for suggesting the option to skip terminating the
- application's child processes.
- Thanks to Miguel Angel Terrón for suggesting copy/truncate rotation.
- Thanks to Yuriy Lesiuk for suggesting setting the environment before querying
- the registry for parameters.
- Thanks to Gerald Haider for noticing that installing a service with NSSM in a
- path containing spaces was technically a security vulnerability.
- Thanks to Scott Ware for reporting a crash saving the environment on XP 32-bit.
- Thanks to Stefan and Michael Scherer for reporting a bug writing the event messages source.
- Thanks to Paul Baxter for help with Visual Studio 2015.
- Thanks to Mathias Breiner for help with Visual Studio and some registry fixes.
- Licence
- -------
- NSSM is public domain. You may unconditionally use it and/or its source code
- for any purpose you wish.
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