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svchost.exe

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svchost.exe (Service Host, or SvcHost) is a system process that can host from one to many Windows services in the Windows NT family of operating systems.[1] Svchost is essential in the implementation of so-called shared service processes, where a number of services can share a process in order to reduce resource consumption. Grouping multiple services into a single process conserves computing resources, and this consideration was of particular concern to NT designers because creating Windows processes takes more time and consumes more memory than in other operating systems, e.g. in the Unix family.[2] However, if one of the services causes an unhandled exception, the entire process may crash. In addition, identifying component services can be more difficult for end users. Problems with various hosted services, particularly with Windows Update,[3][4] get reported by users (and headlined by the press) as involving svchost.

The svchost process was introduced in Windows 2000,[5] although the underlying support for shared service processes has existed since Windows NT 3.1.[2]

Implementation

Its executable image, %SystemRoot%\System32\Svchost.exe or %SystemRoot%\SysWOW64\Svchost.exe (for 32-bit services running on 64-bit systems) runs in multiple instances, each hosting one or more services.

Services running in SvcHost are implemented as dynamically-linked libraries (DLLs). Each service's registry key must have a value named ServiceDll under the Parameters subkey, pointing to the respective service's DLL file. Their ImagePath definition is of the form %SystemRoot%\System32\svchost.exe -k (service group; i.e. netsvcs). Services sharing the same SvcHost process specify the same parameter, having a single entry in the SCM's database. The first time that a SvcHost process is launched with a specific parameter, it looks for a value of the same name under the HKLM\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows NT\CurrentVersion\Svchost key, which it interprets as a list of service names. Then it notifies the SCM of all the services that it hosts. SCM doesn't launch a second SvcHost process for any of those received services: instead, it simply sends a "start" command to the respective SvcHost process containing the name of the service that should be launched within its context, and whose respective DLL SvcHost loads.

According to a 2003 MS presentation, the minimum working set of a shared service is approximately 150 KB instead of 800 KB for a standalone process.[6]

Changes to Service Host grouping in Windows 10

Starting with Windows 10 version 1703, Microsoft changed the way services are grouped into host processes[7]. On client computer systems with more than 3.5 GB of memory, services are no longer grouped into shared host processes. Instead, each service is running in its own process. This results in a better isolation of services, making the computer system more resilient to service failures and vulnerabilities and easier to debug. However, it add some memory overhead.

Service tags

Starting with Windows Vista, the internal identification of services inside shared processes (svchost included) is achieved by so-called service tags. The service tag for each thread is stored in the SubProcessTag of its thread environment block (TEB). The tag is propagated across all threads that a main service thread subsequently starts, except for threads created indirectly by Windows thread-pool APIs.[8]

The set of service tag management routines is currently an undocumented API, although it is used by some Windows utilities like netstat to display the TCP connections associated with each service. Some third party tools like ScTagQuery also make use of this API.[8]

Svchost.exe (netsvcs)

Netsvcs is a sub process used by svchost.exe (netsvcs).[9] If and when there is a memory leak the svchost.exe consumes and hogs the CPU. This issue occurs because a handle leak occurs in the Winmgmt service after installing Windows Management Framework 3.0 on the computer.[10] The Winmgmt service is the Windows Management Instrumentation (WMI) service within the svchost.exe process that is running under the LocalSystem account.

Identification and management of hosted services

In Windows XP and later editions, the command tasklist /svc shows a list of the services being run by each listed process (i.e. by each running instance of svchost.exe), with each separate instance of the svchost process identified by a unique Process ID number (PID).

In Windows Vista and Windows 7, the "Services" tab in Windows Task Manager includes a list of services, showing their groups and Process IDs (PIDs); right-clicking on an svchost instance in the Task Manager's "Processes" tab and selecting "Go to Service(s)" switches to that list of services and selects the service running under the corresponding svchost instance.

In Windows 8, the Task Manager interface was streamlined so that each svchost entry can be expanded by a single click to a sub-list of services running inside it.

The Sysinternals Process Explorer (available as a free download from Microsoft) provides additional information about services running under svchost.exe processes, when the user hovers the mouse over an svchost instance in Process Explorer.

None of the above methods allows the user to identify which of the multiple services running inside an svchost instance accesses a particular resource, i.e. processor, disk, network or memory; the Windows Resource Monitor only accounts for (most of) those resources at process level. It does however show processor usage at service level, on the "CPU" tab.[11] A service-aware list of TCP connections and UDP ports opened can be obtained using the command netstat -b[12].

In order to troubleshoot other kinds of problems with a service running inside an svchost instance, the service(s) suspected to be causing the problem must (all) be reconfigured so that each runs inside its own svchost instance. For example, sc config foo type= own will reconfigure the service named "foo" to run in its own svchost instance. Changing the type back to shared is done by an analogous command. The service must be restarted for such a configuration change to take effect. This debugging process is not foolproof however; in some cases, a heisenbug may occur, which causes the problem to go away when the service is running separately.[13]

A more complex method of troubleshooting is to create an isolated service group.[14]

In Windows 10, starting with release 1703, svchost was redesigned by Microsoft to host only one service per process, depending on available system memory.[15] The default setting causes services to be hosted independently if the system has at least 3.5GB of RAM.

See also

References

  1. ^ Russinovich, Solomon & Ionescu (2009:302)
  2. ^ a b "Shared Services". Retrieved 1 October 2014.
  3. ^ Woody Leonhard (16 December 2013). "Microsoft promises to fix Windows XP SVCHOST redlining 'as soon as possible'". InfoWorld. Retrieved 1 October 2014.
  4. ^ "Svchost.exe gets worse before it's fixed - Series - Windows Secrets". Retrieved 1 October 2014.
  5. ^ "How to troubleshoot Service Host (svchost.exe) related problems?". Retrieved 1 October 2014.
  6. ^ David B. Probert, Windows Service Processes
  7. ^ Changes to Service Host grouping in Windows 10
  8. ^ a b Russinovich, Solomon & Ionescu (2012:335)
  9. ^ "High CPU Usage by svchost.exe (nets". Appuals.com. 2015-12-03. Retrieved 2016-08-12.
  10. ^ "High memory usage by the Svchost.exe". support.microsoft.com. Retrieved 2016-08-12.
  11. ^ "Figuring out why my SVCHOST.EXE is at 100% CPU without complicated tools in Windows 7 - Scott Hanselman". Retrieved 1 October 2014.
  12. ^ Whether this is useful is doubtful, it typically shows only the name of the service for the running web browser (e.g. it lists various items of information related to the internet connection and ports in use, but logs them all as simply "firefox.exe")
  13. ^ "What is svchost.exe, and why do I have so many instances of it?". Retrieved 1 October 2014.
  14. ^ "Getting Started with SVCHOST.EXE Troubleshooting". Retrieved 1 October 2014.
  15. ^ "Changes to Service Host grouping in Windows 10". Microsoft. Retrieved 30 April 2018.

Further reading