Rust library that provides an interface towards working with the following service management platforms:
sc.exe
for use with Window Service (Windows)Requires Rust 1.58.1
or higher!
Add the following to your Cargo.toml
:
toml
[dependencies]
service-manager = "0.1"
This crate provides a mechanism to detect and use the default service
management platform of the current operating system. Each ServiceManager
instance provides four key methods:
install
- will install the service specified by a given contextuninstall
- will uninstall the service specified by a given contextstart
- will start an installed service specified by a given contextstop
- will stop a running service specified by a given context```rust use service_manager::*; use std::{ffi::OsString, path::PathBuf};
// Create a label for our service let label: ServiceLabel = "com.example.my-service".parse().unwrap();
// Get generic service by detecting what is available on the platform
let manager =
// Install our service using the underlying service management platform manager.install(ServiceInstallCtx { label: label.clone(), program: PathBuf::from("path/to/my-service-executable"), args: vec![OsString::from("--some-arg")], }).expect("Failed to install");
// Start our service using the underlying service management platform manager.start(ServiceStartCtx { label: label.clone() }).expect("Failed to start");
// Stop our service using the underlying service management platform manager.stop(ServiceStopCtx { label: label.clone() }).expect("Failed to stop");
// Uninstall our service using the underlying service management platform manager.uninstall(ServiceUninstallCtx { label: label.clone() }).expect("Failed to stop"); ```
By default, service management platforms will interact with system-level
services; however, some service management platforms like systemd
and
launchd
support user-level services. To interact with services at the
user level, you configure your manager using the generic
ServiceManager::set_level
function.
```rust use service_manager::*;
// Create a label for our service let label: ServiceLabel = "com.example.my-service".parse().unwrap();
// Get generic service by detecting what is available on the platform
let mut manager =
// Update our manager to work with user-level services manager.set_level(ServiceLevel::User) .expect("Service manager does not support user-level services");
// Continue operating as usual via install/uninstall/start/stop // ... ```
There are times where you need more control over the configuration of a service tied to a specific platform. To that end, you can create the service manager explicitly and set configuration properties appropriately.
```rust use service_manager::*;
// Create a label for our service let label: ServiceLabel = "com.example.my-service".parse().unwrap();
// Instantiate a specific service manager let mut manager = LaunchdServiceManager::system();
// Update an install configuration property where installing a service // will NOT add the KeepAlive flag manager.config.install.keep_alive = false;
// Install our service using the explicit service manager manager.install(ServiceInstallCtx { label: label.clone(), program: PathBuf::from("path/to/my-service-executable"), args: vec![OsString::from("--some-arg")], }).expect("Failed to install"); ```
For testing purposes, we use a separate crate called system-tests
and
execute singular tests based on desired platform and level. From the root of
the repository, execute the following to run a systemd user test:
bash
cargo test -p system-tests systemd_for_user -- --nocapture
Separately, run a systemd system test using the following (notice using of
sudo -E
to maintain permissions needed for system-level installation):
bash
sudo -E cargo test -p system-tests systemd_for_system -- --nocapture
This project is licensed under either of
Apache License, Version 2.0, (LICENSE-APACHE or apache-license) MIT license (LICENSE-MIT or mit-license) at your option.