19982016 Ericsson AB. All Rights Reserved. Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under the License. erlsrv Patrik Nyblom 1998-04-29 erlsrv.xml
erlsrv Run the Erlang emulator as a service on Windows

This utility is specific to Windows NT/2000/XP (and later versions of Windows). It allows Erlang emulators to run as services on the Windows system, allowing embedded systems to start without any user needing to log on. The emulator started in this way can be manipulated through the Windows services applet in a manner similar to other services.

Notice that erlsrv is not a general service utility for Windows, but designed for embedded Erlang systems.

erlsrv also provides a command-line interface for registering, changing, starting, and stopping services.

To manipulate services, the logged on user is to have administrator privileges on the machine. The Erlang machine itself is (default) run as the local administrator. This can be changed with the Services applet in Windows.

The processes created by the service can, as opposed to normal services, be "killed" with the task manager. Killing an emulator that is started by a service triggers the "OnFail" action specified for that service, which can be a reboot.

The following parameters can be specified for each Erlang service:

Tells how to stop the Erlang emulator. Default is to kill it (Win32 TerminateProcess), but this action can specify any Erlang shell command that will be executed in the emulator to make it stop. The emulator is expected to stop within 30 seconds after the command is issued in the shell. If the emulator is not stopped, it reports a running state to the service manager.

Can be one of the following:

The Windows system is rebooted whenever the emulator stops (a more simple form of watchdog). This can be useful for less critical systems, otherwise use the heart functionality to accomplish this.

Makes the Erlang emulator be restarted (with whatever parameters are registered for the service at the occasion) when it stops. If the emulator stops again within 10 seconds, it is not restarted to avoid an infinite loop, which could hang the Windows system.

Similar to , but does not try to detect cyclic restarts; it is expected that some other mechanism is present to avoid the problem.

(the default)

Reports the service as stopped to the service manager whenever it fails; it must be manually restarted.

On a system where release handling is used, this is always to be set to . Use to restart the service on failure instead.

The location of the Erlang emulator. The default is the located in the same directory as erlsrv.exe. Do not specify as this emulator, it will not work.

If the system uses release handling, this is to be set to a program similar to .

Specifies an extra environment for the emulator. The environment variables specified here are added to the system-wide environment block that is normally present when a service starts up. Variables present in both the system-wide environment and in the service environment specification will be set to the value specified in the service.

The working directory for the Erlang emulator. Must be on a local drive (no network drives are mounted when a service starts). Default working directory for services is . Debug log files will be placed in this directory.

The process priority of the emulator. Can be one of the following:

Not recommended, as the machine will possibly be inaccessible to interactive users.

Can be used if two Erlang nodes are to reside on one dedicated system and one is to have precedence over the other.

Can be used if interactive performance is not to be affected by the emulator process.

(the default>

Specifies the short or long node name of the Erlang emulator. The Erlang services are always distributed. Default is to use the service name as (short) nodename.

Specifies that output from the Erlang shell is to be sent to a "debug log". The log file is named <servicename> or <servicename><N>, where <N> is an integer from 1 through 99. The log file is placed in the working directory of the service (as specified in WorkDir).

Can be one of the following:

Uses a separate log file for every invocation of the service (<servicename><N>).

Reuses the same log file (<servicename>).

Opens an interactive Windows console window for the Erlang shell of the service. Automatically disables the . A service started with an interactive console window does not survive logouts. actions do not work with debug consoles either.

(the default)

The output of the Erlang shell is discarded.

The option is not intended for production. It is only a convenient way to debug Erlang services during development.

The and options might seem convenient in a production system, but consider that the logs grow indefinitely during the system lifetime and cannot be truncated, except if the service is restarted.

In short, the is intended for debugging only. Logs during production are better produced with the standard Erlang logging facilities.

Passes extra arguments to the emulator startup program (or ). Arguments that cannot be specified here are (StopActions would not work), , and (they are specified in any way). The most common use is for specifying cookies and flags to be passed to init:boot() ().

Specifies the Windows-internal service name (not the display name, which is the one erlsrv uses to identify the service).

This internal name cannot be changed, it is fixed even if the service is renamed. erlsrv generates a unique internal name when a service is created. It is recommended to keep to the default if release handling is to be used for the application.

The internal service name can be seen in the Windows service manager if viewing Properties for an Erlang service.

A textual comment describing the service. Not mandatory, but shows up as the service description in the Windows service manager.

The naming of the service in a system that uses release handling must follow the convention NodeName_Release, where NodeName is the first part of the Erlang node name (up to, but not including the "@") and Release is the current release of the application.

erlsrv {set | add} <service-name> [<service options>] Add or modify an Erlang service.

The set and add commands modifies or adds an Erlang service, respectively. The simplest form of an add command is without any options in which case all default values (described above) apply. The service name is mandatory.

Every option can be specified without parameters, the default value is then applied. Values to the options are supplied only when the default is not to be used. For example, sets the default priority and removes all arguments.

Service options:

-st[opaction] [<erlang shell command>]

Defines the , the command given to the Erlang shell when the service is stopped. Default is none.

-on[fail] [{reboot | restart | restart_always}]

The action to take when the Erlang emulator stops unexpectedly. Default is to ignore.

-m[achine] [<erl-command>]

The complete path to the Erlang emulator. Never use the werl program for this. Defaults to the in the same directory as . When release handling is used, this is to be set to a program similar to .

-e[nv] [<variable>[=<value>]] ...

Edits the environment block for the service. Every environment variable specified is added to the system environment block. If a variable specified here has the same name as a system-wide environment variable, the specified value overrides the system-wide. Environment variables are added to this list by specifying <variable>=<value> and deleted from the list by specifying <variable> alone. The environment block is automatically sorted. Any number of options can be specified in one command. Default is to use the system environment block unmodified (except for two additions, see section Environment below).

-w[orkdir] [<directory>]

The initial working directory of the Erlang emulator. Defaults to the system directory.

-p[riority] [{low|high|realtime}]

The priority of the Erlang emulator. Default to the Windows default priority.

{-sn[ame] | -n[ame]} [<node-name>]

The node name of the Erlang machine. Distribution is mandatory. Defaults to ]]>.

-d[ebugtype] [{new|reuse|console}]

Specifies where shell output is to be sent. Default is that shell output is discarded. To be used only for debugging.

-ar[gs] [<limited erl arguments>]

Extra arguments to the Erlang emulator. Avoid , , and /. Default is no extra arguments. Remember that the services cookie file is not necessarily the same as the interactive users. The service runs as the local administrator. Specify all arguments together in one string, use double quotes (") to specify an argument string containing spaces, and use quoted quotes (\") to specify a quote within the argument string if necessary.

-i[nternalservicename] [<internal name>]

Only allowed for add. Specifies a Windows-internal service name for the service, which by default is set to something unique (prefixed with the original service name) by erlsrv when adding a new service. Specifying this is a purely cosmethic action and is not recommended if release handling is to be performed. The internal service name cannot be changed once the service is created. The internal name is not to be confused with the ordinary service name, which is the name used to identify a service to erlsrv.

-c[omment] [<short description>]

Specifies a textual comment describing the service. This comment shows up as the service description in the Windows service manager.

erlsrv {start | start_disabled | stop | disable | enable} <service-name> Manipulate the current service status.

These commands are only added for convenience, the normal way to manipulate the state of a service is through the control panels services applet.

The and commands communicates with the service manager for starting and stopping a service. The commands wait until the service is started or stopped. When disabling a service, it is not stopped, the disabled state does not take effect until the service is stopped. Enabling a service sets it in automatic mode, which is started at boot. This command cannot set the service to manual.

The start_disabled command operates on a service regardless of if it is enabled/disabled or started/stopped. It does this by first enabling it (regardless of if it is enabled or not), then starting it (if not already started), and then disabling it. The result is a disabled but started service, regardless of its earlier state. This is useful for starting services temporarily during a release upgrade. The difference between using start_disabled and the sequence enable, start, and disable is that all other erlsrv commands are locked out during the sequence of operations in start_disable, making the operation atomic from an erlsrv user's point of view.

erlsrv remove <service-name> Remove the service.

Removes the service completely with all its registered options. It is stopped before it is removed.

erlsrv list [<service-name>] List all Erlang services or all options for one service.

If no service name is specified, a brief listing of all Erlang services is presented. If a service name is supplied, all options for that service are presented.

erlsrv help Display a brief help text.

Displays a brief help text.

Environment

The environment of an Erlang machine started as a service contains two special variables:

The name of the service that started the machine. The full path to the , which can be used to manipulate the service. This comes in handy when defining a heart command for your service.

A command file for restarting a service looks as follows:

This command file is then set as heart command.

The environment variables can also be used to detect that we are running as a service and make port programs react correctly to the control events generated on logout (see the next section).

Port Programs

When a program runs in the service context, it must handle the control events that are sent to every program in the system when the interactive user logs off. This is done in different ways for programs running in the console subsystem and programs running as window applications. An application running in the console subsystem (normal for port programs) uses the win32 function to register a control handler that returns true in answer to the and events. Other applications only forward and to the default window procedure.

A brief example in C of how to set the console control handler:

/* ** A Console control handler that ignores the log off events, ** and lets the default handler take care of other events. */ BOOL WINAPI service_aware_handler(DWORD ctrl){ if(ctrl == CTRL_LOGOFF_EVENT) return TRUE; if(ctrl == CTRL_SHUTDOWN_EVENT) return TRUE; return FALSE; } void initialize_handler(void){ char buffer[2]; /* * We assume we are running as a service if this * environment variable is defined. */ if(GetEnvironmentVariable("ERLSRV_SERVICE_NAME",buffer, (DWORD) 2)){ /* ** Actually set the control handler */ SetConsoleCtrlHandler(&service_aware_handler, TRUE); } } ]]>
Notes

Although the options are described in a Unix-like format, the case of the options or commands is not relevant, and both character "/" and "-" can be used for options.

Notice that the program resides in the emulator's directory, not in the directory directly under the Erlang root. The reasons for this are the subtle problem of upgrading the emulator on a running system, where a new version of the runtime system should not need to overwrite existing (and probably used) executables.

To manipulate the Erlang services easily, put the \erts-\bin]]> directory in the path instead of \bin]]>. The erlsrv program can be found from inside Erlang by using the Erlang function.

For release handling to work, use as the Erlang machine. As stated above, the service name is significant.

See Also

start_erl(1), release_handler(3)