README
pm2-windows-support
Allows easily installing and uninstalling PM2 as a service on Windows machines - inspired by pm2-windows-startup, and largely achieved using node-windows.
npm i pm2-windows-support -g
NOTE: pm2-windows-support currently requires node v4.0.0+, if node v0.12.x support is a requirement for you, please post in this issue.
Install and Uninstall the Service
TIP: Run these from an administrative command prompt to avoid getting hit with a bunch of UAC dialogs
pm2-service-install [-n <service name>] [--unattended]
pm2-service-uninstall
The install command also offers to perform some basic setup for you which helps address some of the caveats detailed below.
Quickstart
After reading the caveats section, use PM2 to start the set of processes that you want the service to restore, and then just do:
pm2 save
The service will then restart that set of processes when the service is next started (by default this will be on system boot).
Configuration
You can control what the PM2 service runs using the PM2_SERVICE_SCRIPTS
environment variable, which should be set to a semi-colon separated list of javascript files and/or json config files to run when the service starts (using pm2 start
).
If PM2_SERVICE_SCRIPTS
is not set, then the default behaviour is to call pm2 resurrect
on service startup - when PM2 is running with the list of processes you want launched by the service, use pm2 save
to dump the process list, ready for the service to restore it when it next starts.
Caveats
While testing this, a few caveats have arisen which need to be detailed upfront, as they can lead to issues when PM2 is installed as a service:
- If you don't have the
PM2_HOME
environment variable set (in such a way that it is available to the service user - the simplest being set it at machine level), you might find PM2 attempting to run in strange directories. To resolve this, make sure you set the environment variable and restart the service - though see the comment just below about the location it points to being accessible for the service user. - If you run the service under one user account, and then attempt to interact with PM2 from the command line using a different account, you'll find things don't work as expected if the
PM2_HOME
environment variable contains any "user context" env vars (%APPDATA%
,%USERPROFILE%
etc.), or if one of the users cannot access the location ofPM2_HOME
.- To avoid this problem, either set
PM2_HOME
to an absolute path that all potential users (service and CLI) can write to, or run the service under the same account as you intend to use the CLI from.
- To avoid this problem, either set
- It also seems PM2 throws an error when you try to use the CLI from a non-administrative command prompt after it has been launched as a service, regardless of which user the service runs under (not tested with a non-admin user, yet).
- Currently, the workaround for this, unfortunately, is just use an administrative command prompt if you need to access PM2 via command line when it is running as a service.
- As raised in #24, there appears to be a dependency on having .NET 3.5 installed on the machine on which the service runs (and this holds true even when later versions are installed, you still need 3.5 as well) - this issue is still under investigation but, while that's happening, this is something to bear in mind when setting up the service.
- Lastly, when launching json config files using
PM2_SERVICE_SCRIPTS
, problems arise if the apps declared in the config file don't explicitly have acwd
set (it ends up being the home dir of the service user).pm2-windows-support
attempts to solve this issue for you by automatically defaulting thecwd
property to the directory of the config file when it isn't explicitly set, if this is an issue for you then explicitly setting thecwd
for your apps might be what you need to do.
Logs
The service created by node-windows is currently placed in <global npm packages directory>/node_modules/pm2-windows-support/src/daemon/
, as such, this is also where you will find the log output from the service, should you need it.