Sunday, 17 December 2017

What is the difference between “manual” and “disabled” service in Windows?


Windows services seem to come in three start-up types:



  • Automatic: seems to mean that it is started at bootup

  • Manual: seems to mean that it is not started at bootup

  • Disabled: also seems to mean that it is not started at bootup


What is the difference between the latter two?



Answer



Manual means that the service will start only when Windows or another service needs it, or if you invoke something to start the service. You can use the command net start servicename from the command line to enable a manual service. When you reboot, the service will again be off until you restart it.


Disabled, on the other hand, means that the service will stay off, regardless of whether you try to start it or not. Other services or applications which depend on the disabled service may fail.


See the MSFN discussion thread on Manual vs. Disabled for more info.


No comments:

Post a Comment

Where does Skype save my contact's avatars in Linux?

I'm using Skype on Linux. Where can I find images cached by skype of my contact's avatars? Answer I wanted to get those Skype avat...