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I've got a service that acts as a watchdog for several apps/servers. There are no user sessions on this machine. I'd like the watchdog to be capable of beeping on the internal speaker should something go wrong (that'd be my queue to go fix whatever it's complaining about)

when I try the Beep() API on Windows nothing happens - I suspect the problem is that the services session isnt permitted to make noises?

can I make this work? any other ideas for how to make the service alert me?

-CG

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    You, sir, with your beeps and whistles, are one reason why office environments can get so annoying
    – skaffman
    Aug 18, 2009 at 12:45

5 Answers 5

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Call CreateFile on \device\beep, then send down IOCTL_BEEP_SET (see http://www.koders.com/c/fidFEC3527B9D951559D62722A9C0C603863106CA9B.aspx for details)

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  • Also, please don't do this outside of the very limited scenarios the OP is describing. There's no guarantee this will work in the future (in fact, it's actually already broken on certain Windows releases), this technique is an absolute last resort. If you have any user logged in, you can do this better.
    – Ana Betts
    Oct 5, 2011 at 1:45
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It may work if you allow it to interact with the desktop (an option configurable somewhere, I can't remember where).

But personally, I'd have it email me.

Though maybe you could have it use the task scheduling API to schedule a task for yourself, so next time you log on you can see it.

I don't know; you've got a few options. I'd avoid beeping though.

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Try sending beep char "\a" to console. Not sure if it will work.

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Beeping doesn't seem like a good idea - it might end up driving everyone mad.... I'd also agree about the "interact with desktop" option and you set this in the services parameters see A Windows Service without a template

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I'd recommend creating a simple client application that polls that server to query for any problems and returns a set of status messages. Then an appropriate UI would be raised (e.g. balloon on the tray), an email sent, etc. containing any warning or failure messages.

This way you also know that the watchdog itself is running and has network connectivity - if the watchdog dies and/or machine locks up you wouldn't otherwise know.

It also avoids being thrown out of a window when the machine starts beeping continuously just after you go to lunch. [+1 to @mikej] :-)

The poll period should be around half (see Nyquist sampling rate) your minimum required response time.

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