11

I'm developing a service using .NET on Windows platforms.

It had worked until yesterday... but today it doesn't want to start!!! It seems strange, and I feel I'm missing something...

I've also tried to revert sources to the last working version, but nothing else happens: net start outputs:

The service is not responding to the control function.

What could cause this malfunction?


Probably most of you wants to know more about it. So, let me show you some code:

The service code:

#if DEBUG
class iGeckoService : DebuggableService
#else
class iGeckoService : ServiceBase
#endif
{
    static void Main()
    {
#if DEBUG
        if (Debugger.IsAttached == true) {
            DebuggableService[] services = Services;

            // Create console
            AllocConsole();

            // Emulate ServiceBase.Run
            foreach (DebuggableService service in services)
                service.Start(null);

            // Wait for new line
            Console.WriteLine("Press ENTER to exit..."); Console.ReadLine();

            // Emulate ServiceBase.Run
            foreach (DebuggableService service in services)
                service.Stop();
        } else
            ServiceBase.Run(Services);
#else
        ServiceBase.Run(Services);
#endif
    }

#if DEBUG

    static DebuggableService[] Services
    {
        get {
            return (new DebuggableService[] { new iGeckoService() });
        }
    }

    [DllImport("kernel32")]
    static extern bool AllocConsole();

#else

    static DebuggableService[] Services
    {
        get {
            return (new ServiceBase[] { new iGeckoService() });
        }
    }

#endif

    #endregion

    #region Constructors

    /// <summary>
    /// Default constructor.
    /// </summary>
    public iGeckoService()
    {
        // Base properties
        ServiceName = DefaultServiceName;

        // Service feature - Power events
    }

    #endregion

    protected override void OnStart(string[] args)
    {
        try {
            ...

        } catch (Exception e) {
            sLog.Error("Unable to initialize the service. Request to stop.", e);
        }
    }

    /// <summary>
    /// Stop this service.
    /// </summary>
    protected override void OnStop()
            {
                     ...
            }
  }

  [RunInstaller(true)]
public class iGeckoDaemonInstaller : Installer
{
    /// <summary>
    /// Default constructor.
    /// </summary>
    public iGeckoDaemonInstaller()
    {
        ServiceProcessInstaller spi = new ServiceProcessInstaller();
        spi.Account = ServiceAccount.LocalSystem;

        ServiceInstaller si = new ServiceInstaller();
        si.ServiceName = iGeckoService.DefaultServiceName;
        si.StartType = ServiceStartMode.Automatic;

        Installers.AddRange(new Installer[] {spi, si});
    }
}

class DebuggableService : ServiceBase
{
    public void Start(string[] args) { OnStart(args); }
}

The start script is:

installutil ..\bin\Debug\iGeckoService.exe
net start "Gecko Videowall"

while the stop script is:

net stop "Gecko Videowall"
installutil /u ..\bin\Debug\iGeckoService.exe

However, I think it is a system setting, since the application has worked well until the last day. (Sigh).


Update

When the service was working, I used log4net for logging service activity (I'm unable to attach the debugger to the running service...), and it has always logged.

From now, the log4net log it is never created (even if I enable internal debug option), even if I log at the Main routine!


Another update

It seems that the application is never executed. I've reduced every routine (Main, OnStart, OnStop), and I run an empty service. OnStart routine creates a file on a directory (fully writeable by everyone), but when the service is started, no file is created.


Yet another update

Stimulated by the Rob's comment, I've seen this message on the event viewer:

> Faulting application name: iGeckoService.exe, version: 1.0.0.0, time stamp: 0x4c60de6a
> Faulting module name: ntdll.dll, version: 6.1.7600.16385, time stamp: 0x4a5be02b
> Exception code: 0x80000003
> Fault offset: 0x000000000004f190
> Faulting process id: 0x1258
> Faulting application start time: 0x01cb384a726c7167
> Faulting application path: C:\Users\Luca\Documents\Projects\iGeckoSvn\iGeckoService\bin\Debug\iGeckoService.exe
> Faulting module path: C:\Windows\SYSTEM32\ntdll.dll
> Report Id: b096a237-a43d-11df-afc4-001e8c414537

This is, definitively, the reason on the service shutdown... not question becomes: "How to debug it?" (Thank you Rob, I've never thought about the event viewer until now!) Debugging it running as console application it doesn't show any error, indeed it seems related to the service environment. The only thing that comes to my mind could be some DLL loading failure, since now the service is empty... any idea?

(Thank you all for following me... I'd like to offer you pizza & beer)


Solved!

The service was unable to start since a crash before the Main routine, caused by the installation and the setup of the MS Application Verifier (x64). After having uninstalled that application, everything worked as usual!

Thank you all!

2
  • Is anything logged in the event log around the time you attempt to execute your service?
    – Rob
    Aug 10, 2010 at 7:28
  • Yes. Service crash at startup. Still wondering why, since every working version crash as described.
    – Luca
    Aug 10, 2010 at 8:40

5 Answers 5

4

In general every service must do following two simple things

  • if the service manager send him a control code like SERVICE_CONTROL_START, SERVICE_CONTROL_STOP and so on if should return in a short interval. Using SetServiceStatus function service can prolong this interval for example with calling SetServiceStatus with incremented dwCheckPoint value. (In .NET use can use ServiceBase.RequestAdditionalTime instead)
  • every service must answer to SERVICE_CONTROL_INTERROGATE control code just with return. This control code are used from the service manager to detect whether the service still living.

If your program don't follow one of the rules you receive the error "The service is not responding to the control function."

If you write a program in .NET you don't need to do directly the two things which I described before. The ServiceBase class do there for you. Nevertheless you can easy break this rules if create a thread running with priority higher as normal or if you do some too long work inside an OnXXX handle (OnStop, OnStart, OnPowerEvent etc) without calling of ServiceBase.RequestAdditionalTime. Some other tricks with additional threads can also make problems.

4
  • 1
    Thank you for the information, but it doesn't help. I've commented out the OnStart and OnStop routines (now they have empty implementation) and the behavior it is the same.
    – Luca
    Aug 10, 2010 at 7:11
  • Just try to create a new project for your application, add the .NET installer and inn. Follow the steps from msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/zt39148a.aspx. After a new test service will be successful running include your old code in the new project in small steps. This method MUST work.
    – Oleg
    Aug 10, 2010 at 7:48
  • I agree, I did the same. I HATE this strange behaviors.
    – Luca
    Aug 10, 2010 at 7:51
  • Even if the problem was related by the computer environment, this was the most information answer, so I accept it!
    – Luca
    Aug 15, 2010 at 6:21
4

Usually this happens if you're trying to do too much work in the OnStart call. For example, if you start an endless loop in the same thread, you'll get this error message.

Generally the service should create a new thread in the OnStart call, and then cleanly terminate it in the OnStop call.

Of course that doesn't help if you're using code which was previously working. Have you tried rebooting it since the failure? I seem to remember that if you've already got a service which is borked, it can sometimes be tricky to get back to a working state without rebooting it. You may want to look in your process list and see whether you've got a copy still running, and kill it if so.

1
  • Yeah. I tried to reboot, and I've also commented every lines in the routines OnStart and OnStop... but it hasn't worked.
    – Luca
    Aug 10, 2010 at 6:30
1

For me it just meant that an exception was being thrown. (Platform conflict in Configuration Manager, resulting in "bad image format".) Try running the .exe from the command line and see if you get an error.

0

I see that there is a code block

// Wait for new line
            Console.WriteLine("Press ENTER to exit..."); Console.ReadLine();

as stated by @Jon since this is a service. when service starts it waits for a stipulated time within which it should respond.

there is a statement "Console.ReadLine()" you service will wait until key is pressed. since this is a service will keep waiting at this point

4
  • Actually that code is executed only if I start application using the debugger. This doesn't happens when I start service from command line. I've tried also to run application without DEBUG preprocessor symbol defined, and it has the same behavior.
    – Luca
    Aug 10, 2010 at 6:36
  • you mean in your project properties you have unchecked the define DEBUG constant option? also try building the solution in Release mode and then install it from the release folder.
    – ajay_whiz
    Aug 10, 2010 at 6:46
  • Yes, I have the Release configuration not defining the DEBUG preprocessor symbol.
    – Luca
    Aug 10, 2010 at 6:52
  • 'coz the path you wrote was from debug location "\bin\Debug\iGeckoService.exe"
    – ajay_whiz
    Aug 10, 2010 at 7:01
0

For me it was an error in the file that is configured to the windows service. I found a syntax error due to which I was getting this error code.

Fixed the syntax error and I was able to restart the service again.

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.