Article ID: 101501 - Last Review: February 20, 2007 - Revision: 2.1 Differences Between a Service and a Device DriverThis article was previously published under Q101501 SUMMARY
In Windows NT and Windows 2000, a service and a device driver have
different functions. A service is a user-mode process that implements
the Service Controller Specification. A device driver is a portion of
kernel-mode code that implements the Windows NT Driver Model
Specification.
MORE INFORMATION
There are some similarities between services and device drivers. The
Service Controller is the component of the system that controls
starting, pausing, stopping, and continuing services in the system. It
also starts and stops (loads and unloads) device drivers. The Service
Controller provides a common user interface and application programming
interface (API) for services and device drivers.
In some cases, a service is implemented as a front end for a driver. The Workstation service, for example, is implemented as a service from the perspective of the Service Controller. However, the service controls the network redirector file system driver by translating the control codes from the Service Controller into FSCTL (file system control codes) and passing them to the redirector. Note that the Service Controller can control services and device drivers and it provides an API through which applications can perform the same tasks. APPLIES TO
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