Thanks for the info. But Emin's
bat file and srvman was all it took to get it installed and
running.
On 8/17/2010 6:07 PM, Ted Mittelstaedt wrote:
On 8/17/2010 3:27 PM, Jerry M wrote:
I'm running Windows server 2008, 32-bit.
All the latest fixpacks are
installed.
I used SC exactly like it said:
SC create spamd binPath=c:\spamassassin\spamd.exe
That isn't going to work since spamd does not have code in it to
respond to service commands. I already posted a link to the way
way you should try it but I'll spell it out here:
1) Copy srvany.exe from the Windows Server 2003 Resource Kit to
\Program Files\oldResourceKitTools.
2) issue the sc command:
sc create spamd start= auto binPath= "C:\Program
Files\oldResourceKitTools\srvany.exe" DisplayName= "Spamd" obj=
DOMAIN\User password= password
DOMAIN\User being replaced by the MS domain name your using
and the userID you want to run it under (spamd)
3)run regedit32 and look for
HLM\System\currentcontrolset\services\spamd
and
From the Edit menu, click Add Key. Type the following and click
OK:
Key Name: Parameters
Class :<leave blank>
Select the Parameters key.
From the Edit menu, click Add Value. Type the following and click
OK:
Value Name: Application
Data Type : REG_SZ
String : <path>\<application.ext>
where
.ext><path>\<application.ext>
is the drive and full path to the application executable
including the extension (i.e.,
C:\WinNT\Notepad.exe).ext>.ext>
Close Registry Editor.
4) Open \Management\Services\Spamd. Go to the second
register(Login) and change the "Login as" from the local system
account to another account (use the "Spamd" account, make sure the
user "Spamd" is a member of the Domain Guests group only
It came back and said service installed
successfully. I bring up the
services window, and it is listed as expected. I selected it and
tried
to start it, and got an immediate error.
Correct, it's not a service, that is why you use svrany.exe
Some command-line "daemon" Windows programs have code in them to
respond to service commands, so they will work with the direct
"sc"
method. Microsoft wants to get people to recompile their windows
software with the hooks in it to do this, which is why they don't
spell it out for you. They don't want to piss-off developers so
they aren't being honest and just saying outright "your code is
shit, recompile" so instead they put out a lot of info so users
like
yourself get caught and start bitching at the software developers.
I had already seen the Lemke article. I
actually installed the JAM
version of SpamAssassin. They make a point about include spamd.
But as
usual, give no information on how to use it in a production
server
environment. I sent them a question as well.
Are you saying that no one has EVER run spamd as a windows
service, and
it is impossible to do so short of buying some 3rd party
software?? I
assume that if no one has ever installed it as a service, no one
is
using spamassassin in server mode (i.e. from JAMES) on windows.
That is
pretty amazing considering the popularity of both james and
spamassassin.
If there are indeed users of both on Windows, and if running as
a
service without additional expense is not possible, how are they
doing it?
I just want to know how everyone else is doing this on windows
with the
JAMES mail server, unless I'm the very first person to try it
(???)
I find this line of reasoning rather silly. You have paid close
to
a thousand bucks for that Microsoft Server 2008 software license
and all
of it's CALs and your balking at a miserable $20 to a 3rd party
software
developer to allow you to run a free piece of software?!?!
MS wrote srvany for people like you to use. Instructions for
using
it have to be pieced together out of a dozen bits here and there
precisely because Microsoft doesn't want people like you who don't
want to spend the time piecing together the bits and pieces to be
bothering them on the phone. Forcing you to do this piecing
raises the bar significantly so that people too incompetent to do
the piecing give up and buy a commercial replica of srvany which
gives them a 3rd party to RTFM to them.
I am not saying your incompetent. I AM saying that you really
don't understand much of how Microsoft markets their software.
Your ranting to us precisely because Microsoft gives you a
half-assed tool to use
that doesn't always work right, because Microsoft tries to
position
Windows as both a dumb-user solution and an advanced user
solution. The
dumb users bitch and when nobody helps them they pay $$ to a
commercial
developer. The advanced users know MS is screwing them over but
they
also know how to beat on the system until it kind of works,
sorta. By
starting in with the rhetorical questions and statements your
getting very close to the line between advanced user and dumb
user.
As I said before, svrany is a wrapper. You run the wrapper as a
service
and the wrapper runs spamd. Thus, spamd is run as a service.
Pretty
basic structural theory, there. The rest is figuring out syntax.
Ted
On 8/17/2010 4:54 PM, Ted Mittelstaedt wrote:
On 8/17/2010 2:23 PM, René Berber wrote:
Jerry M wrote:
Ted,
I used SC.exe and it installed spamd successfully as a
service (at
least
that's what sc told me). But when I try to start it, I get
"Error 1053
The service did not respond to the start or control
request in a timely
fashion". The microsoft help on that message is completely
useless.
smapd is NOT a Windows service, you can't install it just
like that.
Rene, the instsrv.exe and srvany.exe programs were written by
Microsoft to allow non-service, command-line daemon programs
to
be run as services. The sc.exe program replaced instsrv.exe
for newer Windows versions.
srvany.exe is a wrapper that responds to service commands and
runs the command-line program just like the user runs it at
the
command line. Microsoft distributed it through the ResKit
because
it is a limited program, for example it does not handle GUI
output
from the program, etc. and Microsoft didn't want to support it
with
100% of
the programs out there. Generally the stuff MS distributes
through
the ResKit are programs that work "most of the time" and
perform
some wildly useful task in a specific circumstance.
So yes, you CAN install programs as services "just like that"
and
a lot of people have done it with many different programs that
are
not services.
I believe with 64-bit windows one other caveat with srvany is
if
the thing you are trying to start with srvany.exe is in the
real 64 bit
windows\system32 folder, you need to type that in as
windows\Sysnative
(Vista only) or to move it somewhere else (XP/2003).
I'm NOT guaranteeing spamd is going to run on all Windows
systems
with srvany. I am just answering the original posters request
on
the "by the book" way of running a program as a service.
If sc and srvany.exe don't work then you can use
http://www.coretechnologies.com/products/AlwaysUp/srvany.html
or
http://iain.cx/src/nssm/
Both are commercial and cost money but handle a much larger
variety
of software than sc & srvany
Have you seen Daniel Lemke's
announcement on this list?
http://article.gmane.org/gmane.mail.spam.spamassassin.general/128839
Perhaps the HOWTO referred on that article (I haven't read
it) is of
some help.
The OP may be running that version of spamd already, he didn't
say.
Ted
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