How to install Redis on Windows 10 pc [duplicate] - windows

How do I run Redis on Windows? The Redis download page just seems to offer *nix options.
Can I run Redis natively on Windows?

Historically, Microsoft had a Windows port of redis, which was released as Redis-64, which offers a full distribution of redis for Windows.
The Microsoft port is now deprecated, but some alternatives have sprung up to fill that void:
Memurai is the alternative officially recommended on the Redis-64 deprecation page; it is a commercial offering with free developer tier, maintained by Janea Systems
redis-windows is another unofficial port, which also exists
This release includes the redis-server.exe (memurai.exe on Memurai) application that runs a Redis instance as a service on your windows machine, as well as redis-cli.exe (memurai-cli.exe on Memurai) which you can use to interact with any Redis instance.
The RGL repository has historically been listed as an alternative Windows port for Redis, but this repository has not been maintained for some time and implements an older version of Redis than the Microsoft port.

Update
If you have Windows Subsystem for Linux (WSL), natively on Windows 10 and Windows Server 2019 you can do it per
Ogglas answer
Or follow these instructions to run a Redis database on Microsoft Windows
Turn on Windows Subsystem for Linux
In Windows 10, Microsoft replaced Command Prompt with PowerShell as the default shell. Open PowerShell as Administrator and run this command to enable Windows Subsystem for Linux (WSL):
Enable-WindowsOptionalFeature -Online -FeatureName Microsoft-Windows-Subsystem-Linux
Reboot Windows after making the change — note that you only need to do this once.
Launch Microsoft Windows Store
start ms-windows-store:
Then search for Ubuntu, or your preferred distribution of Linux, and download the latest version.
Install Redis server
Installing Redis is simple and straightforward. The following example works with Ubuntu (you'll need to wait for initialization and create a login upon first use):
sudo apt-add-repository ppa:redislabs/redis
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get upgrade
sudo apt-get install redis-server
Please note that the sudo command might or mightn't be required based on the user configuration of your system.
Restart the Redis server
Restart the Redis server as follows:
sudo service redis-server restart
Verify if your Redis server is running
Use the redis-cli command to test connectivity to the Redis database.
$ redis-cli
127.0.0.1:6379> set user:1 "Ben"
127.0.0.1:6379> get user:1
"Ben"
Please note: By default, Redis has 0-15 indexes for databases, you can change that number of databases NUMBER in redis.conf.
Stop the Redis Server
sudo service redis-server stop
Source :How to Install Redis on Windows
I found one more simple way to install Redis under Windows
Download the latest Redis .msi file from
https://github.com/MSOpenTech/redis/releases
after installation. The Redis service is installed, and we can operate it from Service manager

If you want to install MSOpenTech's latest port of Redis, on a Windows server, watched over by a Windows Service, without having to build anything yourself, read on.
MSOpenTech's seems to be the only port that is actively trying to keep up with the latest and greatest Redis. They claim it is production-ready, but they haven't exactly packaged it up neatly for installation on a server, especially if you want to run their RedisWatcher service to keep an eye on it, which is recommended. (I tried building RedisWatcher myself per their instructions, but the required Wix Toolset managed to mess up my system pretty good. I won't go into it.) Fortunately they've provided all the binaries you need, just not all in one place. From the README:
So far the RedisWatcher is not carried over to 2.6. However this
should not be affected by the Redis version, and the code in the 2.4
branch should work with the Redis 2.6 binaries.
So you'll need to download binaries from 2 branches in order to get all the necessary bits. Without further ado, here are the steps:
Download and extract the Redis binaries from the 2.6 branch
Copy all extracted binaries to c:\redis\bin
Create another folder at c:\redis\inst1
Download and extract the RedisWatcher binaries from the 2.4 branch
Run InstallWatcher.msi. This should create a Windows service called Redis watcher.
Open up the Windows Services console and start the Redis watcher service.
(optional) RedisWatcher should have installed to C:\Program Files (x86)\RedisWatcher. There you'll find a config file called watcher.conf, which you can edit to set up additional instances, use different paths than I specified in steps 2 & 3, etc. You will not need to restart the service for changes to take effect.

The most updated (only few minor releases behind) version of Redis can be found here. This repository provides you with 3.2.100 version (current is 3.2) whereas the most upvoted answer gives you only 2.4.6 version and the last update to the repo was 2 years ago.
The installation is straightforward: just copy everything from the archive to any folder and run redis-server.exe to run the server and redis-cli.exe to connect to this server through the shell.

To install Redis for Windows
You can choose either from these sources
https://github.com/MSOpenTech/redis/releases
or
https://github.com/rgl/redis/downloads
Personally I preferred the first option
Download Redis-x64-2.8.2104.zip
Extract the zip to prepared directory
run redis-server.exe or redis-server.exe --maxheap 2gb
then run redis-cli.exe
You can start using Redis now, please refer for commands

Maybe its a little Late but, I was able to run Redis on Windows 10 Aniversary Update.
Windows 10 Aniversary Update Comes with Bash on Ubuntu on Windows, simply, it comes with bash.
Below are the two tutorial that I followed:
1- How to Install and Use the Linux Bash Shell on Windows 10
2- How To Install and Use Redis
Below is the image of running Redis.
Enjoy :)

If you have Windows Subsystem for Linux (WSL), natively on Windows 10 and Windows Server 2019 you can do it like this:
Set up WSL:
To enable Windows Subsystem for Linux, follow the instructions on
Microsoft Docs. The short version is: In Windows 10, Microsoft
replaces Command Prompt with PowerShell as the default shell. Open
PowerShell as Administrator and run this command to enable Windows
Subsystem for Linux (WSL):
Enable-WindowsOptionalFeature -Online -FeatureName Microsoft-Windows-Subsystem-Linux
Reboot Windows after making the change—note that you only need to do this one time.
Download and install one of the supported Linux distros from the Microsoft Store. Ubuntu works fine.
Note that Ubuntu 20.04 LTS may give you some trouble because of a known issue with the realtime clock (as of August 2020). Choosing Ubuntu 18.04 LTS instead avoids that issue.
Install and Test Redis:
Launch the installed distro from your Windows Store and then install redis-server. The following example works with Ubuntu (you’ll need to wait for initialization and create a login upon first use):
> sudo apt-get update
> sudo apt-get upgrade
> sudo apt-get install redis-server
> redis-cli -v
Restart the Redis server to make sure it is running:
> sudo service redis-server restart
Execute a simple Redis command to verify your Redis server is
running and available:
$ redis-cli
127.0.0.1:6379> set user:1 "Oscar"
127.0.0.1:6379> get user:1
"Oscar"
To stop your Redis server:
> sudo service redis-server stop
Source:
https://redislabs.com/blog/redis-on-windows-10/
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Windows_Subsystem_for_Linux

Go to the releases and you can get a ZIP file containing the relevant files as well as a Word document called RedisService.docx with the following instructions:
Installing the Service
--service-install
This must be the first argument on the redis-server command line. Arguments after this are passed in the order they occur to Redis when the service is launched. The service will be configured as Autostart and will be launched as "NT AUTHORITY\NetworkService". Upon successful installation a success message will be displayed and Redis will exit.
This command does not start the service.
For instance:
redis-server --service-install redis.windows.conf --loglevel verbose
And then later, in the same document, another example:
The following would install and start three separate instances of Redis as a service:
redis-server --service-install -–service-name redisService1 –port 10001
redis-server --service-start --service-name redisService1
redis-server --service-install --service-name redisService2 –port 10002
redis-server --service-start --service-name redisService2
redis-server --service-install --service-name redisService3 –port 10003
redis-server --service-start --service-name redisService3
From what I can gather, this appears to be the new way forward rather than messing with a separate Windows service to monitor and restart the CLI.

Download redis from
Download Redis for windows
Then install it
open cmd with admin rights
run command net start redis
Thats it.

MS Open Tech recently made a version of Redis available for download on Github. They say that it isn't production ready yet, but keep an eye on it.
Github repo
Download releases as MSIs

You can use Memurai for Windows, a Redis-compatible cache and datastore for Windows, currently compatible with Redis 5. Memurai aims to fulfill the need for a supported Redis-compatible datastore on the Windows platform. At its core, it’s based on Redis source code, ported to run natively on Windows, and it’s designed to provide the level of reliability and performance required for production environments. Memurai is free for development and testing. You can learn more and download Memurai at https://www.memurai.com.
Alexis Campailla
CEO, Memurai

There are two ways. You can use MSI installation file or do it manually:
First download the msi or the zip file:
You can download both files from here:
https://github.com/MicrosoftArchive/redis/releases
Watch video tutorial (video covers example of both installations)
See this installation video tutorial: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ncFhlv-gBXQ
Instruction - for those who can not YT at work:
You can download a moderately out-of-date precompiled version of Redis for 32-bit
and 64-bit Windows thanks to Dusan Majkic from his GitHub page: https://github.com/dmajkic/redis/downloads. Go ahead and do that now.
After you download Redis, you’ll need to extract the executables from the zip file.
As long as you’re using a version of Windows more recent than Windows XP, you
should be able to extract Redis without any additional software. Do that now.
After you’ve extracted either the 32- or 64-bit version of Redis to a location of your
choice (depending on your platform and preferences; remember that 64-bit Windows
can run 32- or 64-bit Redis, but 32-bit Windows can only run 32-bit Redis), you can
start Redis by double-clicking on the redis-server executable. After Redis has
started, you should see a window similar to figure A.1.
src: https://redis.com/ebook/appendix-a/a-3-installing-on-windows/a-3-2-installing-redis-on-window/

Since MSOpenTech's port of Redis is no longer maintained - anyone interested in native port of Redis for Windows can now get the version 4.0.14 and 5.0.10 from here: https://github.com/tporadowski/redis/releases.
This fork is a merge of latest 3.2.100 version from MSOpenTech and 4.0.14/5.0.10 from antirez/redis with a couple of bugfixes.

I don't run redis on windows. There's too much hassle involved in keeping up with the ports, and they lag behind redis-stable by a version or two all the time.
Instead I run redis on a Vagrant virtual machine that runs redis for me. I've bundled up the whole thing into a simple github repo so everyone can get in on the fun without too much hassle. The whole thing is an automated build so there's no mess. I blogged about the details here.

To install Redis on Windows system follow the below steps:
Visit one of the below link:
https://github.com/MSOpenTech/redis/releases (recommended)
https://github.com/rgl/redis/downloads
Download MSI file.
Follow the installation Wizard and install the program on your system. (do not change the installation path that is "C:\Program Files\Redis")
Search for "Edit system environment variable" on your start menu
Click on "Environment Variable" button
Select "Path" and click on "Edit"
Now click on "New"
Paste C:\Program Files\Redis (or the path in case you have changed while installing)
Click on "Okay", "Okay" and "Okay"
Now open your Terminal (command prompt) and run redis-cli
Well I am getting some error to open redis-server (It was working fine till now but not sure what's wrong so figuring out and will update this answer)

I think these is the two most simple ways to run Redis on Windows
1 - Native (and updated) port for Windows
As described here on Option 3) Running Microsoft's native port of Redis:
Download the redis-latest.zip native 64bit Windows port of redis
wget https://github.com/ServiceStack/redis-windows/raw/master/downloads/redis-latest.zip
Extract redis64-latest.zip in any folder, e.g. in c:\redis
Run the redis-server.exe using the local configuration
cd c:\redis
redis-server.exe redis.conf
Run redis-cli.exe to connect to your redis instance
cd c:\redis
redis-cli.exe
2 - With Vagrant
You can use Redis on Windows with Vagrant, as described here:
Install Vagrant on Windows
Download the vagrant-redis.zip vagrant configuration
wget https://raw.github.com/ServiceStack/redis-windows/master/downloads/vagrant-redis.zip
Extract vagrant-redis.zip in any folder, e.g. in c:\vagrant-redis
Launch the Virtual Box VM with vagrant up:
cd c:\vagrant-redis
vagrant up
This will launch a new Ubuntu VM instance inside Virtual Box that will
automatically install and start the latest stable version of redis.

If you're happy with a bit of Powershell, you can also get very up-to-date Windows binaries using Powershell and chocolatey.
First, add chocolatey to Powershell following the instructions here (one simple command line as admin): https://chocolatey.org/
#powershell -NoProfile -ExecutionPolicy unrestricted -Command "iex ((new-object net.webclient).DownloadString('https://chocolatey.org/install.ps1'))" && SET PATH=%PATH%;%ALLUSERSPROFILE%\chocolatey\bin
Then, use Powershell to get the redis package from chocolatey: http://chocolatey.org/packages/redis-64
choco install redis-64
Redis will be installed in something like C:\ProgramData\chocolatey\lib\redis-64.2.8.9
Windows PowerShell Copyright (C) 2013 Microsoft Corporation. All
rights reserved.
PS C:\windows\system32> choco install redis-64 Chocolatey (v0.9.8.27)
is installing 'redis-64' and dependencies. By installing you accept
the license for 'redis-64' an d each dependency you are installing.
redis-64 v2.8.9 Added
C:\ProgramData\chocolatey\bin\redis-benchmark.exe shim pointed to
'..\lib\redis-64.2.8.9\redis-benchmark.exe'. Added
C:\ProgramData\chocolatey\bin\redis-check-aof.exe shim pointed to
'..\lib\redis-64.2.8.9\redis-check-aof.exe'. Added
C:\ProgramData\chocolatey\bin\redis-check-dump.exe shim pointed to
'..\lib\redis-64.2.8.9\redis-check-dump.exe'. Added
C:\ProgramData\chocolatey\bin\redis-cli.exe shim pointed to
'..\lib\redis-64.2.8.9\redis-cli.exe'. Added
C:\ProgramData\chocolatey\bin\redis-server.exe shim pointed to
'..\lib\redis-64.2.8.9\redis-server.exe'. Finished installing
'redis-64' and dependencies - if errors not shown in console, none
detected. Check log for errors if unsure
Then run the server with
redis-server
Or the CLI with
redis-cli
Follow the instructions in C:\ProgramData\chocolatey\lib\redis-64.2.8.9\RedisService.docx to install the redis service

The Redis download page now has links to some unofficial Windows ports. The dmajkic one seems to be the most popular/complete.
More detailed answer: How to run Redis as a service under Windows

One of the most easy way to run Redis on windows host is to use Docker Redis container. Just fire up Hyper-V, Download Docker and run Redis

I am using Memurai which is Redis-compatible cache and datastore for Windows. It is also recommended by Microsoft open tech as it written on their former project here.
This project is no longer being actively maintained. If you are
looking for a Windows version of Redis, you may want to check out
Memurai. Please note that Microsoft is not officially endorsing this
product in any way.

you can install Redis by following this article:
https://github.com/ServiceStack/redis-windows
but for going straight, you can download it by this link:
https://github.com/ServiceStack/redis-windows/raw/master/downloads/redis-latest.zip
after downloading, go to the directory which you like to put your files,then extract the zip file, then open a command prompt and go to the directory where you extracted your file, then type "redis-server" and hit enter(for opening redis-cli open command and route to redis directory, but instead of "redis-server" execute "redis-cli").

I've provided installation instructions and downloads for the 2 most popular ways of running Redis on windows at: https://github.com/mythz/redis-windows that shows how to:
Use Vagrant to run the latest stable version of Redis inside a
VirtualBox VM.
Download and run Microsoft's Native Windows port of Redis

Using Windows 10?
https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/wsl/install-win10
/etc/apt/sources.list
(Debian 10 Buster/Bullseye)
Installs latest stable Redis (5.0.6 at time of posting)
deb https://deb.debian.org/debian bullseye main
deb https://deb.debian.org/debian bullseye-updates main
deb http://security.debian.org/debian-security/ buster/updates main
deb http://ftp.debian.org/debian bullseye-backports main
apt install redis-server

Today I know these 4 options:
The first is an open source fork that is on tporadowski/redis that offers compatibility with version 5 (version 6 in development).
The second is memurai (paid), compatible with version 5, has support and a free version for development.
The third is the zkteco-home/redis-windows recently, which offers compatibility with version 7, but is not open source.
There is also the option to run via WSL. But I don't recommend it in production environments.

You can try out baboonstack, which includes redis and also a node.js and mongoDB version manager. And it's cross platform.

The redis version on windows was published by microsoft open tech team But recently this project has been archived to https://github.com/MicrosoftArchive/redis read-only and will not update. Has stopped development

Here are my steps to install Redis 4.0.8 on Windows 10 Pro (1709) via Windows Subsystem for Linux:
in home/user/
01 wget http://download.redis.io/releases/redis-4.0.8.tar.gz
02 tar xzf redis-4.0.8.tar.gz
03 cd redis-4.0.8/
04 sudo apt-get install make
05 sudo apt-get update
06 sudo apt-get install gcc
07 cd deps
08 make hiredis jemalloc linenoise lua geohash-int
09 cd ..
10 make
You can skip several steps if you have an up-to-date environment.

The MSOpenTech-Redis project is no longer being actively maintained. If you are looking for a Windows version of Redis, you may want to check out Memurai. Please note that Microsoft is not officially endorsing this product in any way. More details in https://github.com/microsoftarchive/redis
To install & setup Redis Server on Windows 10 https://redislabs.com/blog/redis-on-windows-10
To install & setup Redis Server on macOS & Linux https://redis.io/download
Also, you may install & setup Redis Server on Linux via the package manager
For quick Redis Server Installation & Setup Guide for macOS https://github.com/rahamath18/Redis-on-MacOS

You can go through the below steps and get setup redis in windows.
Download the Redis zip file. Click here!
Extract the zip file to the prepared directory.
Run redis-server.exe, you can either directly run redis-server.exe by clicking or run via command prompt.
Run redis-cli.exe, after successfully running the redis-server. You can access it and test commands by running redis-cli.exe Test
PING command is used to test if a connection is still alive.

Reading about some users running Redis in a VM, it brought to my mind the recommendations from Redis team :
Redis runs slower on a VM. Virtualization toll is quite high because for many common operations. (...) Prefer to run Redis on a physical box, especially if you favor deterministic latencies. On a state-of-the-art hypervisor (VMWare), result of redis-benchmark on a VM through the physical network is almost divided by 2 compared to the physical machine, with some significant CPU time spent in system and interruptions.

Related

how can i install heroku in my kali linux operating system?

I cant install heroku in my kali linux operating system. how can i resolve this issue?
isn't it not possible to run heroku in kali linux?
when I have try to install, it show snap command not found.
Heroku no longer supports Snap installs:
Snap installs are no longer supported. Please use another install method below.
Since Kali is derived from Debian, you should be able to use the Debian / Ubuntu method (which doesn't auto-update) or the standalone tarball method (which does). You can also use the NPM / Yarn package if you prefer, though Heroku recommends against it.
All of these options require some amount of trust in Heroku. The first two pull a script down from the Internet and pipe it into sh, which always makes me a bit uneasy. I suspect they both request elevated privileges during the install process. Instead of piping the file directly in to sh as Heroku recommends, I suggest you download it and at least give it a quick read through the first time.
In any case, here is the command that Heroku recommends to install the standalone version:
curl https://cli-assets.heroku.com/install.sh | sh

Why Rethinkdb don't have binary for windows?

I am interested in Rethinkdb and would like to develop/test on it, but main problem is: it don't have package for windows operating system. I tried to compile from source code, that was also not possible as there was no any instruction.
What makes it so difficult to make executable for windows? Is there any alternative way to install Rethinkdb in windows OS? even very small and not that famous application has windows binary but not Rethinkdb. It is quite surprise for me. Another surprising is there are many community executable for other OS but not windows.
Thank you for understanding and waiting for good answer.
Rethinkdb just announced that it started development for Windows. Please follow
[1] https://github.com/rethinkdb/rethinkdb/issues/1100
[2] https://twitter.com/segphault/status/590633792781611009
Update:
RethinkDB announced in Windows :
[3] https://rethinkdb.com/docs/install/windows/
Cross-platform development isn't that easy. RethinkDB uses some features under the covers which makes porting it to Windows a difficult job, f.e. a Unix toolchain for the builds and Unix syscalls. For more information on that have a look at this GitHub issue. It states that Windows support is planned, but with low priority.
As a quick fix, you could RethinkDB run in a virtual machine or in Microsoft Azure. For the second one, I wrote a blog post a few weeks ago.
RethinkDB has already started development for Windows. While it's not released yet, this is how you can run it through Vagrant. See: https://github.com/gearz-lab/rethinkdb-vagrant
I'm using Chocolatey, feel free to skip steps if they don't apply.
Installing Chocolatey
Open Powershell as an administrator and run this command:
iex ((new-object net.webclient).DownloadString('https://chocolatey.org/install.ps1'))
... now you should have Chocolatey installed. We're gonna use to install the others.
Installing Vagrant
Run this as an administrator:
choco install vagrant -y
Installing VirtualBox
Vagrant relies on a virtualization application that it calls a "provider". The default one is VirtualBox so let's install it. Run cmd as administrator and run this:
choco install virtualbox -y
Now you should be able to run the vboxmanage command. If it doesn't work, make sure C:\Program Files\Oracle\VirtualBox is in your PATH.
Installing Cygwin
We're gonna log on a virtual machine using SSH, so we need a SSH enabled terminal. For that, let's use Cygwin.
choco install cyg-get -y
Installing Cygwin packages
There'are two Cygwin packages we need to install, openssh, because Cygwin doesn't have SSH support by default, and rsync so Vagrant can use it to synchronize files between the host and the guest machines.
On PowerShell, running as an administrator, let's run these commands:
cyg-get openssh
cyg-get rsync
Cloning rethinkdb-vagrant
Open the Cygwin64 Terminal. You should now be in your Cygwin home folder, which should look like C:\tools\cygwin\home\[YOUR_USER].
Make sure you have git installed. If you don't just choco install git -y. Now, clone rethyinkdb-vagrant:
git clone https://github.com/gearz-lab/rethinkdb-vagrant.git
Now you should have a directory like this: C:\tools\cygwin\home\[YOUR_USER]\rethinkdb-vagrant.
Starting Vagrant and useful commands
From inside the Cygwin64 Terminal home directory (described in the last step), type cd rethinkdb-vagrant, now, any Vagrant commands will target cd rethinkdb-vagrant.
To setup and boot the machine: vagrant up (After this, RethinkDB is available, see next step).
To access the machine's terminal: vagrant ssh.
To destroy the machine (every RethinkDB data will be lost): vagrant destroy.
To suspend the machine: vagrant suspend.
To resume a suspended machine: vagrant resume.
Accessing RethinkDB.
Make sure you have vagrant up from the last step. Now:
For accessing the web administration tool: http://localhost:8080.
For accessing RethinkDB from a client app, the port is 28015.

Installing openstack on mac

I am unable to find how to install openstack on my macbook.
I tried googling but every where i am getting for ubuntu and not for mac
Kindly help me to install as i am a noob in openstack
Late reply but just in case:
You can install VirtualBox and get ubuntu running on it. Directly installing OpenStack on your macbook is usually a bad thing to do since it can mess up your system.
Very late answer but this is to install the openstack command line clients.
first, you have to have python installed on your machine. Open the terminal and type python --version. If you see something like Python 2.7.9, go to next step.
So now, you have to install pip. Pip is a python package manager. You do this by typing easy_install pip. Should work.
Then you have to install every clients one by one.
(taken straight from http://docs.openstack.org/user-guide/common/cli_install_openstack_command_line_clients.html)
ceilometer - Telemetry API
cinder - Block Storage API and extensions
glance - Image service API
heat - Orchestration API
neutron - Networking API
nova - Compute API and extensions
sahara - Database Processing API
swift - Object Storage API
trove - Database service API
openstack - Common OpenStack client supporting multiple services
And the way to install those, one by one, is by calling:
pip install python-PROJECTclient.
So, for instance, you go pip install python-openstackclient. Or pip install python-novaclient. You do that for every client that you need.
Don't forget, before you be able to use those APIs, you have to set up particular environment variables in your shell by sourcing an "openrc" file: http://docs.openstack.org/user-guide/common/cli_set_environment_variables_using_openstack_rc.html
Once this is done, you may use the clients API.
You can install Openstack's python-client which is tools for sending command via http.
But there is no official option to install Openstack services on mac, yet. You can use Hypervisor like Virtualbox and Vmware to install Linux and launch Openstack Services, or docker.
It looks like progress has been made since these last posts. The easiest answer for just testing out OpenStack on your local machine is to use devstack.
Tutorial:
http://anteaya.info/blog/2013/09/01/installing-devstack-with-vagrant/
NOTE: The tutorial mentions to mv samples/localrc . but the file name has been updated to local.conf. Also, I copied the file over instead of moving it.
DevStack Homepage:
http://docs.openstack.org/developer/devstack/

NSClient++ not getting installed in windows

I have installed Nagios monitoring tool in linux whose service is running successfully as expected.
Now as per NSClient documentation, the windows part is not getting installed.
The required steps are:
(a) Copy pNSClient.exe, pdh.dll, psapi.dll and counters.defs in any directory on the machine you want to monitor. ie. (c:\nsclient).
(b) Open a dos prompt in the installation directory
(c) Run the following command : >pNSClient.exe /install
(d) Type 'net start nsclient' on the command line or start the service 'Nagios Agent' in the services applet of the control panel.
The installation will create an entry for the service in the registry and create a new key to store parameters. The created key is the following:
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\NSClient
The issue is with the installation as per the first step, and the 'net start nsclient' command is not executing on command prompt, its showing service name invalid
Any help regarding this ? M installing this on windows 7.
Only the windows installation part of NSClient is remaining yet the linux part is properly installed along with the 'check_nt' plugin.
Thanks in advance !!
NSClient is antiquated and deprecated. You should be using NSClient++ (AKA nscp), which has an actual installer, along with excellent documentation.
Alternatively, if you are dealing with more than a few dozen Windows hosts, and are using Active Directory, you might want to consider Nagios-WSC. Whether or not it will suit your needs depends on what sort of checks you are hoping to do, though.
That documentation might be out of date. Try using the following doc to install NSClient++. The doc is for Nagios XI, but the agent instructions should be the same.
http://assets.nagios.com/downloads/nagiosxi/docs/Installing_The_XI_Windows_Agent.pdf
Otherwise, you could also try:
net start nsclient++
just an advice - forget about manual installs )
install choco
iex ((New-Object System.Net.WebClient).DownloadString('https://chocolatey.org/install.ps1'))
restart powershell session and
install nsclient++
choco install nscp

How to install Memcached on Windows Server 2008

I was trying to install Memcached using "-d install", wasn't working with an error. However, it was recommended to use NSSM to install the service. I read somewhere that running memcahced as a service would stick to only 64 MB regardless of the command line options you give it.
What's the right way to install Memcached on a windows server with a different "-m" option not the default?
Thanks

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