88

Besides the service.StartType = ServiceStartMode.Automatic my service does not start after installation

Solution

Inserted this code on my ProjectInstaller

protected override void OnAfterInstall(System.Collections.IDictionary savedState)
{
    base.OnAfterInstall(savedState);
    using (var serviceController = new ServiceController(this.serviceInstaller1.ServiceName, Environment.MachineName))
        serviceController.Start();
}

Thanks to ScottTx and Francis B.

1
  • It doesn't start right after installation or it doesn't start when you reboot? Commented Jul 28, 2009 at 17:17

8 Answers 8

185

I've posted a step-by-step procedure for creating a Windows service in C# here. It sounds like you're at least to this point, and now you're wondering how to start the service once it is installed. Setting the StartType property to Automatic will cause the service to start automatically after rebooting your system, but it will not (as you've discovered) automatically start your service after installation.

I don't remember where I found it originally (perhaps Marc Gravell?), but I did find a solution online that allows you to install and start your service by actually running your service itself. Here's the step-by-step:

  1. Structure the Main() function of your service like this:

    static void Main(string[] args)
    {
        if (args.Length == 0) {
            // Run your service normally.
            ServiceBase[] ServicesToRun = new ServiceBase[] {new YourService()};
            ServiceBase.Run(ServicesToRun);
        } else if (args.Length == 1) {
            switch (args[0]) {
                case "-install":
                    InstallService();
                    StartService();
                    break;
                case "-uninstall":
                    StopService();
                    UninstallService();
                    break;
                default:
                    throw new NotImplementedException();
            }
        }
    }
    
  2. Here is the supporting code:

    using System.Collections;
    using System.Configuration.Install;
    using System.ServiceProcess;
    
    private static bool IsInstalled()
    {
        using (ServiceController controller = 
            new ServiceController("YourServiceName")) {
            try {
                ServiceControllerStatus status = controller.Status;
            } catch {
                return false;
            }
            return true;
        }
    }
    
    private static bool IsRunning()
    {
        using (ServiceController controller = 
            new ServiceController("YourServiceName")) {
            if (!IsInstalled()) return false;
            return (controller.Status == ServiceControllerStatus.Running);
        }
    }
    
    private static AssemblyInstaller GetInstaller()
    {
        AssemblyInstaller installer = new AssemblyInstaller(
            typeof(YourServiceType).Assembly, null);
        installer.UseNewContext = true;
        return installer;
    }
    
  3. Continuing with the supporting code...

    private static void InstallService()
    {
        if (IsInstalled()) return;
    
        try {
            using (AssemblyInstaller installer = GetInstaller()) {
                IDictionary state = new Hashtable();
                try {
                    installer.Install(state);
                    installer.Commit(state);
                } catch {
                    try {
                        installer.Rollback(state);
                    } catch { }
                    throw;
                }
            }
        } catch {
            throw;
        }
    }
    
    private static void UninstallService()
    {
        if ( !IsInstalled() ) return;
        try {
            using ( AssemblyInstaller installer = GetInstaller() ) {
                IDictionary state = new Hashtable();
                try {
                    installer.Uninstall( state );
                } catch {
                    throw;
                }
            }
        } catch {
            throw;
        }
    }
    
    private static void StartService()
    {
        if ( !IsInstalled() ) return;
    
        using (ServiceController controller = 
            new ServiceController("YourServiceName")) {
            try {
                if ( controller.Status != ServiceControllerStatus.Running ) {
                    controller.Start();
                    controller.WaitForStatus( ServiceControllerStatus.Running, 
                        TimeSpan.FromSeconds( 10 ) );
                }
            } catch {
                throw;
            }
        }
    }
    
    private static void StopService()
    {
        if ( !IsInstalled() ) return;
        using ( ServiceController controller = 
            new ServiceController("YourServiceName")) {
            try {
                if ( controller.Status != ServiceControllerStatus.Stopped ) {
                    controller.Stop();
                    controller.WaitForStatus( ServiceControllerStatus.Stopped, 
                         TimeSpan.FromSeconds( 10 ) );
                }
            } catch {
                throw;
            }
        }
    }
    
  4. At this point, after you install your service on the target machine, just run your service from the command line (like any ordinary application) with the -install command line argument to install and start your service.

I think I've covered everything, but if you find this doesn't work, please let me know so I can update the answer.

28
  • 13
    Note that this solution does not require the use of InstallUtil.exe, so you do not have to deliver it as part of your installation program.
    – Matt Davis
    Commented Jul 28, 2009 at 17:48
  • 3
    What's the point with the empty "catch { throw; }" clauses? Also, it is probably not a good idea to hide failures by "Rollback()" as that situation basically leaves the system in an undefined state I guess (you tryied to install a service, failed somewhere in the middle and couldn't undo it). You should at least "show" the user that there is something fishy - or does the Rollback() function write some messages to the console? Commented Sep 29, 2009 at 5:17
  • 5
    The rollback does write data to the console. As for the empty catch blocks, it's a debugging thing. I can put a breakpoint at the throw statement to examine any exceptions that may occur.
    – Matt Davis
    Commented Sep 29, 2009 at 12:30
  • 4
    I am getting error Error: The type or namespace name 'YourServiceType' could not be found (are you missing a using directive or an assembly reference?
    – Yogesh
    Commented Apr 23, 2013 at 16:13
  • 5
    YourServiceType is the ProjectInstaller you added to the service which contains ServiceInstaller and ServiceProcessInstaller
    – bansi
    Commented Oct 1, 2013 at 11:55
20

You can do this all from within your service executable in response to events fired from the InstallUtil process. Override the OnAfterInstall event to use a ServiceController class to start the service.

http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/system.serviceprocess.serviceinstaller.aspx

1
  • 3
    This is a nice solution, but still requires the use of the InstallUtil utility. If you're already delivering InstallUtil as part of your installation, this makes the most sense. But, if you want to forego packaging InstallUtil, use the command-line solution.
    – Matt Davis
    Commented Jul 28, 2009 at 17:57
6

Visual Studio

If you are creating a setup project with VS, you can create a custom action who called a .NET method to start the service. But, it is not really recommended to use managed custom action in a MSI. See this page.

ServiceController controller  = new ServiceController();
controller.MachineName = "";//The machine where the service is installed;
controller.ServiceName = "";//The name of your service installed in Windows Services;
controller.Start();

InstallShield or Wise

If you are using InstallShield or Wise, these applications provide the option to start the service. Per example with Wise, you have to add a service control action. In this action, you specify if you want to start or stop the service.

Wix

Using Wix you need to add the following xml code under the component of your service. For more information about that, you can check this page.

<ServiceInstall 
    Id="ServiceInstaller"  
    Type="ownProcess"  
    Vital="yes"  
    Name=""  
    DisplayName=""  
    Description=""  
    Start="auto"  
    Account="LocalSystem"   
    ErrorControl="ignore"   
    Interactive="no">  
        <ServiceDependency Id="????"/> ///Add any dependancy to your service  
</ServiceInstall>
0
5

You need to add a Custom Action to the end of the 'ExecuteImmediate' sequence in the MSI, using the component name of the EXE or a batch (sc start) as the source. I don't think this can be done with Visual Studio, you may have to use a real MSI authoring tool for that.

4

To start it right after installation, I generate a batch file with installutil followed by sc start

It's not ideal, but it works....

4

Use the .NET ServiceController class to start it, or issue the commandline command to start it --- "net start servicename". Either way works.

4

To add to ScottTx's answer, here's the actual code to start the service if you're doing it the Microsoft way (ie. using a Setup project etc...)

(excuse the VB.net code, but this is what I'm stuck with)

Private Sub ServiceInstaller1_AfterInstall(ByVal sender As System.Object, ByVal e As System.Configuration.Install.InstallEventArgs) Handles ServiceInstaller1.AfterInstall
    Dim sc As New ServiceController()
    sc.ServiceName = ServiceInstaller1.ServiceName

    If sc.Status = ServiceControllerStatus.Stopped Then
        Try
            ' Start the service, and wait until its status is "Running".
            sc.Start()
            sc.WaitForStatus(ServiceControllerStatus.Running)

            ' TODO: log status of service here: sc.Status
        Catch ex As Exception
            ' TODO: log an error here: "Could not start service: ex.Message"
            Throw
        End Try
    End If
End Sub

To create the above event handler, go to the ProjectInstaller designer where the 2 controlls are. Click on the ServiceInstaller1 control. Go to the properties window under events and there you'll find the AfterInstall event.

Note: Don't put the above code under the AfterInstall event for ServiceProcessInstaller1. It won't work, coming from experience. :)

2
  • VB.net code is not bad! For those of us who work in multiple languages it is nice to not have to convert the code from C! Commented Nov 29, 2011 at 0:33
  • Thanks, this helped me to figure out how to automatically start a service. Commented Feb 24, 2018 at 17:30
0

The easiest solution is found here install-windows-service-without-installutil-exe by @Hoàng Long

@echo OFF
echo Stopping old service version...
net stop "[YOUR SERVICE NAME]"
echo Uninstalling old service version...
sc delete "[YOUR SERVICE NAME]"

echo Installing service...
rem DO NOT remove the space after "binpath="!
sc create "[YOUR SERVICE NAME]" binpath= "[PATH_TO_YOUR_SERVICE_EXE]" start= auto
echo Starting server complete
pause

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