NSSM 2.2.

master
Iain Patterson 15 years ago
parent c425384408
commit 44284fb9f6

@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
NSSM: The Non-Sucking Service Manager
Version 2.1, 2009-12-28 by Benjamin Mayrargue (www.softlion.com)
Version 2.2, 2010-04-04
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
@ -17,6 +17,9 @@ 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.
Usage
-----
@ -56,13 +59,37 @@ 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 will take
much like srvany. But NSSM is the Non-Sucking service manager and can take
action if/when the application dies.
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 30 seconds
between each attempt, until the service is successfully started or you send
it a stop signal.
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 30 seconds between each attempt, until the service is
successfully started or you send it a stop signal.
NSSM will look in the registry under
HKLM\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Services\<service>\Parameters\AppExit for
string (REG_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. 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.
Removing services using the GUI

@ -13,8 +13,8 @@
int str_equiv(const char *, const char *);
#define NSSM "nssm"
#define NSSM_VERSION "2.1"
#define NSSM_DATE "2009-12-28"
#define NSSM_VERSION "2.2"
#define NSSM_DATE "2010-04-04"
#define NSSM_RUN "run"
#endif

Loading…
Cancel
Save