From d01fb3c907e85b2c912ee17cc1c230387bf65eef Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: "William A. Rowe Jr" Date: Fri, 9 Jun 2000 18:33:02 +0000 Subject: [PATCH] PR: Obtained from: Submitted by: Reviewed by: Andrew Braund's very complete review of the Win32 documentation! These should have a profound effect on the number of Win32 inquiries and problem reports. I will have some minor notes on running as another user, and using the perl .dsp conversion scripts to add as a seperate commit later today. git-svn-id: https://svn.apache.org/repos/asf/httpd/httpd/trunk@85484 13f79535-47bb-0310-9956-ffa450edef68 --- docs/manual/platform/win_service.html | 275 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 275 insertions(+) create mode 100644 docs/manual/platform/win_service.html diff --git a/docs/manual/platform/win_service.html b/docs/manual/platform/win_service.html new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..0d62b51f4f --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/manual/platform/win_service.html @@ -0,0 +1,275 @@ + + + +Running Apache for Windows as a Service + + + + +

Running Apache for Windows as a Service

+ +

Running Apache as a service should only be done once you have successfully run +it as a console application. See Using Apache with Microsoft Windows +before you attempt to run it as a service. +

+ +

Apache can be run as a service on Win NT/2000. (There is also some HIGHLY EXPERIMENTAL +support for a similar effect on Win95/98). +

+ +

To start Apache as a service, you first need to install it as a + service. Multiple Apache services can be installed, each with a + different name and configuration. To install the default Apache + service named "Apache", run the "Install Apache as Service (NT only)" + option from the Start menu. Once this is done you can start the "Apache" + service by opening the Services window (in the Control Panel), selecting Apache, + then clicking on Start. Apache will now be running in the background. You + can later stop Apache by clicking on Stop. As an alternative to using + the Services window, you can start and stop the "Apache" service from the control + line with + +

+  NET START APACHE
+  NET STOP APACHE
+
+ +See Signalling Service Apache when Running +for more information on installing and controlling Apache services. + +

Apache, unlike many other Windows NT/2000 services, logs any + errors to it's own error.log file in the logs folder within the + Apache server root folder. You will not find Apache error + details in the Windows NT Event Log.

+ +

+ +After starting Apache as a service (or if you have trouble starting it) you can test it +using the same procedure as for running in a console window. + + +

Running Apache for Windows as a Service

+ Note: The -n option to specify a service name is only available + with Apache 1.3.7 and later. Earlier versions of Apache only support + the default service name 'Apache'. + +

+ +You can install Apache as a Windows NT service as follows: + +

+    apache -i -n "service name"
+
+ +To install a service to use a particular configuration, specify the +configuration file when the service is installed: + +
+    apache -i -n "service name" -f "\my server\conf\my.conf"
+
+ +To remove an Apache service, use + +
+    apache -u -n "service name"
+
+ +The default "service name", if one is not specified, is "Apache". + +

+ +Once a service is installed, you can use the -n option, in conjunction +with other options, to refer to a service's configuration file. For example:
+ +To test a service's configuration file: +

+    apache -n "service name" -t
+
+ +To start a console Apache using a service's configuration file: +
+    apache -n "service name"
+
+ +

Important Note on service dependencies:

+ +

Prior to Apache release 1.3.13, the dependencies required to + successfully start an installed service were not configured. + After installing a service using earlier versions of Apache, + you must follow these steps: + +

+    Run regedt32
+    Select Window - "HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE on Local Machine" from the menu
+    Double-click to open the SYSTEM, then the CurrentControlSet keys
+    Scroll down and click on the Apache servicename
+    Select Edit - Add Value... from the menu
+    Fill in the Add Value dialog with 
+        Value Name: DependOnGroup 
+        Data Type: REG_MULTI_SZ
+        and click OK
+    Leave the Multi-String Editor dialog empty and click OK
+    Select Edit - Add Value... from the menu
+    Fill in the Add Value dialog with 
+        Value Name: DependOnService
+        Data Type: REG_MULTI_SZ
+        and click OK
+    Type the following list (one per line) in the Multi-String Editor dialog
+        Tcpip
+        Afd
+        and click OK
+
+ +

If you are using COM or DCOM components from a third party module, ISAPI, + or other add-in scripting technologies such as ActiveState Perl, you may + also need to add the entry Rpcss to the DependOnService list. To avoid + exposing the TCP port 135 when it is unnecessary, Apache does not create + that entry upon installation. Follow the directions above to find or + create the DependOnService value, double click that value if it already + exists, and add the Rpcss entry to the list.

+ + +

Note on default "System account" (LocalSystem) that Apache will run under.

+ + When Apache is installed as a service e.g. with the apache -i command, it will run + as "System Account" (LocalSystem) user. +
+       docs say:
+       LocalSystem is a very privileged account locally, so 
+       you shouldn't run any shareware applications there. 
+       However, it has no network privileges and cannot leave 
+       the machine via any NT-secured mechanism, including
+       file system, named pipes, DCOM, or secure RPC.
+ 
+       and:
+ 
+       A service that runs in the context of the LocalSystem account
+       inherits the security context of the SCM. It is not 
+       associated with any logged-on user account and does not have 
+       credentials (domain name, user name, and password) to be used
+       for verification. This has several implications: [... removed ...]
+ 
+       That _really_ sucks.  Can we recommend running Apache as some 
+       other user?
+			 
+   Recommendations to be added...
+
+ +

Troubleshooting Apache for Windows as a Service

+ +

When starting Apache as a service you may encounter an error message from + Windows service manager. For example if you try to start Apache using the Services + applet in Windows Control Panel you may get the following message; +

+  Could not start the apache service on \\COMPUTER
+  Error 1067; The process terminated unexpectedly.
+
+

You will get this error if there is any problem starting Apache. In order to see + what is causing the problem you should follow the instructions + for Testing Apache at the Command Prompt. +

+ +

Note on error code 2186. +

+

If you encounter error 2186 when trying to start Apache, the following workaround may help; +

+
+   Select the service in Control Panel and click Startup.
+   Verify that the service account is correct.
+   Retype the password and password confirmation.
+   Go to User Manager for Domains.
+   Click on Policies from the title bar menu, and select User Rights.
+   Select the option for Advanced User Rights.
+   In the drop-down list, verify that the following rights have been 
+   granted to the service account:
+   Act as part of the operating system
+   Back up files and directories
+   Log on as a service
+   Restore files and directories
+
+ + +

Running Apache for Windows from the Command Line

+ +For details on controlling Apache service from the command line, please refer to +console command line section. + + +

Signalling Service Apache when running

+ +On Windows NT, multiple instances of Apache can be run as services. +Signal an Apache service to start, restart, or shutdown/stop as follows: + +
+    apache -n "service name" -k start
+    apache -n "service name" -k restart
+    apache -n "service name" -k shutdown
+    apache -n "service name" -k stop
+
+ +(Note; shutdown and stop are identical actions). +In addition, you can use the native NT NET command to +start and stop Apache services as follows: + +
+    NET START "service name"
+    NET STOP "service name"
+
+ + +

HIGHLY EXPERIMENTAL Windows 95/98 Service

+ +There is some support for Apache on Windows 95/98 to behave in a similar +manner as a service on NT/2000. This is HIGHLY EXPERIMENTAL, +if it works (at all) the Apache Group can not attest to it's reliability +or future support of the feature. Use at your own risk! + +

Once you have confirmed that Apache runs correctly at the + Command Prompt you can install it as a + service with the command; +

+ +
+    apache -i
+
+ +

You can run Apache as a Windows 95/98 service as follows: +

+ +
+    apache -k runservice
+
+ +

Apache will attempt to start and if successful it will run in the background. + If you ran this command via a shortcut on your desktop, for example, then if the service starts + successfully a console window may flash up but will immediately disappear. + If Apache detects any errors on startup such as a incorrect entries in the + httpd.conf file then a console window will be left visible. This will display + an error message which will be useful in tracking down the cause of the problem. +

+ +

You can signal the Apache service to start, restart or shutdown/stop as follows: +

+ +
+    apache -k start
+    apache -k restart
+    apache -k shutdown
+    apache -k stop
+
+(Note; shutdown and stop are identical actions). + +

Windows 95/98 does not support NET START or NET STOP commands so + you must use the above commands at a command prompt. You may wish to set up a shortcut + for each of these commands so that you can just click on it to perform the required action. +

+ +

You can uninstall the Apache service as follows: +

+ +
+    apache -u
+
+ + + + -- 2.40.0