0

How do I achieve the following in a couple of Powershell one-liners (one to start, one to stop)?

I want to start service MyService in Powershell and also start all other services that are Required by MyService (i.e. services on which MyService Depends) that are not already started. I want to then be able to stop MyService and all the services I originally started with MyService, but not all other services on which MyService depends that were already started when I started MyService.

To clarify: If MyService Requires Service1, Service2 and Service3, and Service3 is also Required by UnrelatedService and is already running for UnrelatedService then I do not need/want to start Service3 in order to start MyService. Nor do I want to stop Service3 when I stop MyService because then UnrelatedService would fail. I do want to stop Service1 and Service2 when I stop MyService because they are Required only by MyService.

Secondly, I want to do this recursively, such that if there were other RequiredServices to Service1 and Service2 (recall Service3 is already running, therefore so are the services on which Service3 Depends) then I also want to start those other services on which Service1 and Service2 Depend and which are not already started.

Successful outcome would be that the list of [all services that are running after] I stop MyService is the same as the list of [all services that were running before] I started MyService and those on which it Depends.

My attempt

Get-Service MyService | 
   Select -expand RequiredServices | 
   Start-Service 

Start-Service : Service 'My Full Service Name (myservice)' cannot be started due to the following error: Cannot start service MyService on computer '.'. At line:1 char:57 + Get-Service MyService | Select -expand RequiredServices | Start-Service + + CategoryInfo : OpenError: (System.ServiceProcess.ServiceController:ServiceController) [Start-Service], ServiceCommandException + FullyQualifiedErrorId : CouldNotStartService,Microsoft.PowerShell.Commands.StartServiceCommand

9
  • 1
    And what's the question? You may (re-)read the help topic How do I ask a good question? and maybe How to create a Minimal, Reproducible Example
    – Olaf
    Apr 9, 2020 at 0:34
  • @Olaf "How do I do this in Powershell?" - sorry if that was not obvious. I am very new to Powershell so I am not sure how to even create an example, hence the detailed and precise description with the desired Outcome...
    – skeetastax
    Apr 9, 2020 at 0:42
  • The next questions usually are: What have you tried so far? Please share your code and explain where you've got stuck or what does not work as expected. ;-)
    – Olaf
    Apr 9, 2020 at 0:57
  • 1
    Are you running this as administrator? What service is failing to start? Apr 9, 2020 at 6:03
  • 1
    @skeetastax - The above error message should be of RequiredServices rather than 'MyService'. Can you check once? If you are not able to start a service it might be disabled. In that case, you need to run Set-Service 'MyService' -StartupType manual. Then please try to run the above to start the required services. Apr 9, 2020 at 8:28

1 Answer 1

1

Sounds you need a Foreach-Object statement here. IMO your pipeline just does not recognize the expanded RequiredServices as a 'service' object.

Get-Service MyService | select -ExpandProperty RequiredServices | % {Start-Service $_.Name}

Or more verbose:

Get-Service MyService | Select-Object -ExpandProperty RequiredServices | ForEach-Object {Start-Service $_.Name}

After this you would be starting your service:

Start-Service MyService
1
  • Thanks for your input, but the above doesn't look recursive to me and doesn't appear to provide a way to then stop all services that were started (but no other RequiredServices) after I am done.
    – skeetastax
    Apr 11, 2020 at 2:54

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.