- ID de l'analyse :
- 08050e74-1020-40cd-8ba2-49115ae71cafTerminée
- URL soumise :
- https://nssm.cc/
- Fin du rapport :
Liens : 1 trouvé(s)
Liens sortants identifiés à partir de la page
Lien | texte |
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http://iain.cx/ | Author |
Variables JavaScript : 3 trouvée(s)
Les variables JavaScript globales chargées dans l'objet fenêtre d'une page sont des variables déclarées en dehors des fonctions et accessibles depuis n'importe quel endroit du code au sein du champ d'application actuel
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onbeforetoggle | object |
documentPictureInPicture | object |
onscrollend | object |
Messages de journal de console : 1 trouvé(s)
Messages consignés dans la console web
Type | Catégorie | Enregistrement |
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error | network |
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HTML
Le corps HTML de la page en données brutes
<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/loose.dtd"><html><head>
<meta http-equiv="Content-type" content="text/html; charset=utf-8">
<meta http-equiv="Content-language" content="en">
<title>NSSM - the Non-Sucking Service Manager</title>
<link rel="stylesheet" href="/style.css" type="text/css">
</head>
<body>
<div id="menu">
<a href="/"><img src="/images/logo.jpg" alt="nssm.cc" border="0"></a>
<br>
<p class="menuindent"><a href="/description">Stable version<br></a>
<a href="/download">Download<br></a>
<a href="/builds">All builds<br></a>
<a href="/usage">Usage<br></a>
<a href="/commands">Command line<br></a>
<a href="/scenarios">Use cases<br></a>
<a href="/bugs">Bugs<br></a>
<a href="/changelog">Changelog<br></a>
<a href="/credits">Credits<br></a>
<a href="http://git.nssm.cc/nssm/nssm">Gitweb<br></a>
<a href="/building">Building<br></a>
<a href="/l10n">Localisation<br></a>
<a href="/v3">Planned features<br></a>
<a href="/not">... is not<br></a>
<a href="http://iain.cx/">Author</a></p>
</div>
<div id="main">
<h1>NSSM - the Non-Sucking Service Manager</h1>
<p><em>nssm</em> is a service helper which doesn't suck. <em>srvany</em> and
other service helper programs suck because they don't handle failure of the
application running as a service. If you use such a program you may see a
service listed as started when in fact the application has died.
<em>nssm</em> monitors the running service and will restart it if it dies.
With
<em>nssm</em> you know that if a service says it's running, it really is.
Alternatively, if your application is well-behaved you can configure
<em>nssm</em> to absolve all responsibility for restarting it and let Windows
take care of recovery actions.</p>
<p><em>nssm</em> logs its progress to the system Event Log so you can get some
idea of why an application isn't behaving as it should.</p>
<p><em>nssm</em> also features a graphical service installation and removal
facility. Prior to version 2.19 it did suck. Now it's quite a bit better.</p>
</div>
</body></html>