an easy way to debug windows service in .net

Introduction

Normally debugging a windows service under Visual Studio .Net is painful.  Windows services won't actually run directly within Visual Studio .Net, so the usual technique is to install and start the windows service and then attach a debugger to it.  An alternative approach is to pull the guts out of the service, stick it in a separate library and then build some other app (e.g. a console app) to sit in front of it.  This approach uses neither of those techniques.

When building a C# Windows Service project in Visual Studio it will leave you with a class containing quite a few methods including a Main(), such as this:

// The main entry point for the process
static void Main()
{
    System.ServiceProcess.ServiceBase[] ServicesToRun;

    // More than one user Service may run within the same process. To add
    // another service to this process, change the following line to
    // create a second service object. For example,
    //
    // ServicesToRun = new System.ServiceProcess.ServiceBase[] {new Service1(), new MySecondUserService()};
    //

    ServicesToRun = new System.ServiceProcess.ServiceBase[] { new Service1() };
    System.ServiceProcess.ServiceBase.Run(ServicesToRun);
}

Obviously its the Main() above that ends up executing the service, and it's the Main() that this approach manipulates so that the Windows Service can be debugged directly within Visual Studio .Net

Using the example above (and removing some of the comments) here's how:

// The main entry point for the process
static void Main()
{
#if (!DEBUG)
    System.ServiceProcess.ServiceBase[] ServicesToRun;
    ServicesToRun = new System.ServiceProcess.ServiceBase[] { new Service1() };
    System.ServiceProcess.ServiceBase.Run(ServicesToRun);
#else
    // debug code: allows the process to run as a non-service
    // will kick off the service start point, but never kill it
    // shut down the debugger to exit
    Service1 service = new Service1();
    service.<Your Service's Primary Method Here>();
    System.Threading.Thread.Sleep(System.Threading.Timeout.Infinite);
#endif 
}

It's crude, but effective (CBE).  Run the service in debug mode to debug it, compile and install it as a release build and it's a full and proper windows service.

ref

http://www.codeproject.com/useritems/DebugWinServices.asp

原文地址:https://www.cnblogs.com/margiex/p/140384.html