What about 'Let us know what's inside the daemon.raw file?' - it should point you to the reason. If not directly, it is a good start to see what is going on.
I would start with checking the daemon.raw to see what exactly is happening. Check if the service is coming up completely or not. If you are unable find anything on the daemon.raw, check the system and application events on the event logs to see what is causing the service to be killed. See if the port 7937 is being used by something else and if possible disable the AV and check if the service sustains.
bingo.1
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January 17th, 2020 02:00
What about 'Let us know what's inside the daemon.raw file?' - it should point you to the reason. If not directly, it is a good start to see what is going on.
crazyrov
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January 19th, 2020 21:00
@MBI IT
I would start with checking the daemon.raw to see what exactly is happening. Check if the service is coming up completely or not. If you are unable find anything on the daemon.raw, check the system and application events on the event logs to see what is causing the service to be killed. See if the port 7937 is being used by something else and if possible disable the AV and check if the service sustains.