+Stopping the service\r
+--------------------\r
+When stopping a service NSSM will attempt several different methods of killing\r
+the monitored application, each of which can be disabled if necessary.\r
+\r
+First NSSM will attempt to generate a Control-C event and send it to the\r
+application's console. Batch scripts or console applications may intercept\r
+the event and shut themselves down gracefully. GUI applications do not have\r
+consoles and will not respond to this method.\r
+\r
+Secondly NSSM will enumerate all windows created by the application and send\r
+them a WM_CLOSE message, requesting a graceful exit.\r
+\r
+Thirdly NSSM will enumerate all threads created by the application and send\r
+them a WM_QUIT message, requesting a graceful exit. Not all applications'\r
+threads have message queues; those which do not will not respond to this\r
+method.\r
+\r
+Finally NSSM will call TerminateProcess() to request that the operating\r
+system forcibly terminate the application. TerminateProcess() cannot be\r
+trapped or ignored, so in most circumstances the application will be killed.\r
+However, there is no guarantee that it will have a chance to perform any\r
+tidyup operations before it exits.\r
+\r
+Any or all of the methods above may be disabled. NSSM will look for the\r
+HKLM\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Services\<service>\Parameters\AppStopMethodSkip\r
+registry value which should be of type REG_DWORD set to a bit field describing\r
+which methods should not be applied.\r
+\r
+ If AppStopMethodSkip includes 1, Control-C events will not be generated.\r
+ If AppStopMethodSkip includes 2, WM_CLOSE messages will not be posted.\r
+ If AppStopMethodSkip includes 4, WM_QUIT messages will not be posted.\r
+ If AppStopMethodSkip includes 8, TerminateProcess() will not be called.\r
+\r
+If, for example, you knew that an application did not respond to Control-C\r
+events and did not have a thread message queue, you could set AppStopMethodSkip\r
+to 5 and NSSM would not attempt to use those methods to stop the application.\r
+\r
+Take great care when including 8 in the value of AppStopMethodSkip. If NSSM\r
+does not call TerminateProcess() it is possible that the application will not\r
+exit when the service stops.\r
+\r
+\r
+I/O redirection\r
+---------------\r
+NSSM can redirect the managed application's I/O to any path capable of being\r
+opened by CreateFile(). This enables, for example, capturing the log output\r
+of an application which would otherwise only write to the console or accepting\r
+input from a serial port.\r
+\r
+NSSM will look in the registry under\r
+HKLM\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Services\<service>\Parameters for the keys\r
+corresponding to arguments to CreateFile(). All are optional. If no path is\r
+given for a particular stream it will not be redirected. If a path is given\r
+but any of the other values are omitted they will be receive sensible defaults.\r
+\r
+ AppStdin: Path to receive input.\r
+ AppStdout: Path to receive output.\r
+ AppStderr: Path to receive error output.\r
+\r
+Parameters for CreateFile() are providing with the "AppStdinShareMode",\r
+"AppStdinCreationDisposition" and "AppStdinFlagsAndAttributes" values (and\r
+analogously for stdout and stderr).\r
+\r
+In general, if you want the service to log its output, set AppStdout and\r
+AppStderr to the same path, eg C:\Users\Public\service.log, and it should\r
+work. Remember, however, that the path must be accessible to the user\r
+running the service.\r
+\r
+\r