![]() I had already noticed that if you changed the startup directory, MinimServer couldn't find its configuration and prompted for a new one. Is there some reason why you can't configure the Windows service to change directory to the "lib" directory before starting MinimServer? For example, you could do this by running a cmd.exe /c script that sets the directory and then starts MinimServer. If you use a different directory for startup, MinimServer will go into test mode, which isn't supported or recommended. MinimServer uses the startup directory location to compute the location of its configuration files. Looking at that thread (which I should have found) that user decided instead to automate running minimserver as the currently logged on user. (30-05-2016 21:09)simoncn Wrote: For a description of what another user has done, see this post. MS documentation on these topics leaves a lot to be desired, but I think I can see what one might do.Īs far as I can see from the MinimWatch documentation, I should be able to control any MinimServer instance on my local network, which is convenient, but reinforces my desire to run MinimServer with just enough privileges. In any case it would be desirable to "harden" the service using virtual service accounts and/or service SIDs, ideally a restricted Service SID. Or there may be other better ways of doing this. NSSM - the Non-Sucking Service Manager from Alternatively there is an open source (and modernised) implementation of the old srvany tool from Microsoft. So, has anybody done any work on this? As far as I can tell, there are a number of variations on the tanuki wrapper which is a Java framework/library for managing Java applications as windows services. I think that there is support for doing something like this on linux systems, and that you can run without a UI on windows. As far as I can see the standard windows install is meant to run as the currently logged on user. I'd like to run Minim as a service on a Windows (10) box.
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