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Other Sciences
Computing and Technology
Determining where a STOP is coming from
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[QUOTE="newjerseyrunner, post: 5705577, member: 553315"] I'm having this terrible problem with a server that I inherited. The service has a custom service running on it, and this service handles service commands. Every hour or so on some of the servers, I see the service go down. It always comes from a STOP. I assumed there must be something wrong with the service, so I added logging to every place where a STOP is generated internally. I got nothing. That indicates to me that it's coming from another process. Is there any way to determine which process it is? It's too random to try and just wait for it. I checked in the windows automation tools and the scheduler, and there are no tasks in there. [/QUOTE]
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Determining where a STOP is coming from
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