This OnStart was provided here by Marc Gravell:
public void OnStart(string[] args) // should this be override?
{
var worker = new Thread(DoWork);
worker.Name = "MyWorker";
worker.IsBackground = false;
worker.Start();
}
void DoWork()
{
// do long-running stuff
}
Note that OnStart can launch multiple threads or the first thread started may be used to start additional threads as needed. This allows you to set up either database polling or a thread that waits on a message queue for data.
A useful tip:
Adding a Main to your service allows you to run it as a console application in Visual Studio. This greatly simplifies debugging.
static void Main(string[] args)
{
ServiceTemplate service = new ServiceTemplate();
if (Environment.UserInteractive)
{
// The application is running from a console window, perhaps creating by Visual Studio.
try
{
if (Console.WindowHeight < 10)
Console.WindowHeight = 10;
if (Console.WindowWidth < 240) // Maximum supported width.
Console.WindowWidth = 240;
}
catch (Exception)
{
// We couldn't resize the console window. So it goes.
}
service.OnStart(args);
Console.Write("Press any key to stop program: ");
Console.ReadKey();
Console.Write("\r\nInvoking OnStop() ...");
service.OnStop();
Console.Write("Press any key to exit: ");
Console.ReadKey();
}
else
{
// The application is running as a service.
// Misnomer. The following registers the services with the Service Control Manager (SCM). It doesn't run anything.
ServiceBase.Run(service);
}
}