By Rick Anderson, Tom Dykstra, and Steve Smith
Your Mac will re-open programs that you recently had open if you don't close them before turning off your Mac. There are a couple of ways to do this: Apps - Programs found in the Dock or Launchpad that didn't come from the App Store (e.g., Audacity or Microsoft Word). Click the Apple Menu, click Force Quit, then click an app and click Force Quit.
The Startup
class configures services and the app's request pipeline.
The Startup class
ASP.NET Core apps use a Startup
class, which is named Startup
by convention. The Startup
class:
You may be used to simply pressing the Power button on your Mac to turn it on, but in the case that you need to start up your Mac in a different mode, you’ll need to press a specific key combination to do so. MacOS features different modes for troubleshooting which you can activate by pressing the specific key combination during the startup boot process. When you start up your Mac, there’s usually a couple of apps that are ready to greet you right after the timeless startup tune. Unfortunately, some of those apps are more excited to see you than you are to see them. The third-party app Delay Start lets you set a timer for specific apps to control when they start up. Delay Start works similarly to the Mac’s own internal interface. Delay Start works similarly. Loading programs automatically upon startup is a very convenient function, especially if the user knows exactly the list of applications that he needs regularly every day. When you turn on your PC that works on Mac OS, whether it’s a MacBook or a desktop computer, you can configure a set of programs that will start automatically.
Mac Configure App That Start At Boot Free
- Optionally includes a ConfigureServices method to configure the app's services. A service is a reusable component that provides app functionality. Services are registered in
ConfigureServices
and consumed across the app via dependency injection (DI) or ApplicationServices. - Includes a Configure method to create the app's request processing pipeline.
ConfigureServices
and Configure
are called by the ASP.NET Core runtime when the app starts:
The preceding sample is for Razor Pages; the MVC version is similar.
The Startup
class is specified when the app's host is built. The Startup
class is typically specified by calling the WebHostBuilderExtensions.UseStartup<TStartup> method on the host builder:
The host provides services that are available to the Startup
class constructor. The app adds additional services via ConfigureServices
. Both the host and app services are available in Configure
and throughout the app.
Only the following service types can be injected into the Startup
constructor when using the Generic Host (IHostBuilder):
Most services are not available until the Configure
method is called.
Multiple Startup
When the app defines separate Startup
classes for different environments (for example, StartupDevelopment
), the appropriate Startup
class is selected at runtime. The class whose name suffix matches the current environment is prioritized. If the app is run in the Development environment and includes both a Startup
class and a StartupDevelopment
class, the StartupDevelopment
class is used. For more information, see Use multiple environments.
See The host for more information on the host. For information on handling errors during startup, see Startup exception handling.
The ConfigureServices method
The ConfigureServices method is:
- Optional.
- Called by the host before the
Configure
method to configure the app's services. - Where configuration options are set by convention.
The host may configure some services before Startup
methods are called. For more information, see The host.
For features that require substantial setup, there are Add{Service}
extension methods on IServiceCollection. For example, AddDbContext, AddDefaultIdentity, AddEntityFrameworkStores, and AddRazorPages:
Adding services to the service container makes them available within the app and in the Configure
method. The services are resolved via dependency injection or from ApplicationServices.
The Configure method
The Configure method is used to specify how the app responds to HTTP requests. The request pipeline is configured by adding middleware components to an IApplicationBuilder instance. IApplicationBuilder
is available to the Configure
method, but it isn't registered in the service container. Hosting creates an IApplicationBuilder
and passes it directly to Configure
.
The ASP.NET Core templates configure the pipeline with support for:
- ASP.NET Core MVC and Razor Pages
The preceding sample is for Razor Pages; the MVC version is similar.
Each Use
extension method adds one or more middleware components to the request pipeline. For instance, UseStaticFiles configures middleware to serve static files.
Each middleware component in the request pipeline is responsible for invoking the next component in the pipeline or short-circuiting the chain, if appropriate.
Additional services, such as IWebHostEnvironment
, ILoggerFactory
, or anything defined in ConfigureServices
, can be specified in the Configure
method signature. These services are injected if they're available.
For more information on how to use IApplicationBuilder
and the order of middleware processing, see ASP.NET Core Middleware.
Configure services without Startup
To configure services and the request processing pipeline without using a Startup
class, call ConfigureServices
and Configure
convenience methods on the host builder. Multiple calls to ConfigureServices
append to one another. If multiple Configure
method calls exist, the last Configure
call is used.
Extend Startup with startup filters
Use IStartupFilter:
- To configure middleware at the beginning or end of an app's Configure middleware pipeline without an explicit call to
Use{Middleware}
.IStartupFilter
is used by ASP.NET Core to add defaults to the beginning of the pipeline without having to make the app author explicitly register the default middleware.IStartupFilter
allows a different component to callUse{Middleware}
on behalf of the app author. - To create a pipeline of
Configure
methods. IStartupFilter.Configure can set a middleware to run before or after middleware added by libraries.
IStartupFilter
implements Configure, which receives and returns an Action<IApplicationBuilder>
. An IApplicationBuilder defines a class to configure an app's request pipeline. For more information, see Create a middleware pipeline with IApplicationBuilder.
Each IStartupFilter
can add one or more middlewares in the request pipeline. The filters are invoked in the order they were added to the service container. Filters may add middleware before or after passing control to the next filter, thus they append to the beginning or end of the app pipeline.
The following example demonstrates how to register a middleware with IStartupFilter
. The RequestSetOptionsMiddleware
middleware sets an options value from a query string parameter:
The RequestSetOptionsMiddleware
is configured in the RequestSetOptionsStartupFilter
class:
Mac Configure App That Start At Boot Windows 10
The IStartupFilter
is registered in the service container in ConfigureServices.
When a query string parameter for option
is provided, the middleware processes the value assignment before the ASP.NET Core middleware renders the response.
Middleware execution order is set by the order of IStartupFilter
registrations:
Multiple
IStartupFilter
implementations may interact with the same objects. If ordering is important, order theirIStartupFilter
service registrations to match the order that their middlewares should run.Libraries may add middleware with one or more
IStartupFilter
implementations that run before or after other app middleware registered withIStartupFilter
. To invoke anIStartupFilter
middleware before a middleware added by a library'sIStartupFilter
:- Position the service registration before the library is added to the service container.
- To invoke afterward, position the service registration after the library is added.
Add configuration at startup from an external assembly
An IHostingStartup implementation allows adding enhancements to an app at startup from an external assembly outside of the app's Startup
class. For more information, see Use hosting startup assemblies in ASP.NET Core.
Additional resources
The Startup class
ASP.NET Core apps use a Startup
class, which is named Startup
by convention. The Startup
class:
- Optionally includes a ConfigureServices method to configure the app's services. A service is a reusable component that provides app functionality. Services are registered in
ConfigureServices
and consumed across the app via dependency injection (DI) or ApplicationServices. - Includes a Configure method to create the app's request processing pipeline.
ConfigureServices
and Configure
are called by the ASP.NET Core runtime when the app starts:
The Startup
class is specified when the app's host is built. The Startup
class is typically specified by calling the WebHostBuilderExtensions.UseStartup<TStartup> method on the host builder:
The host provides services that are available to the Startup
class constructor. The app adds additional services via ConfigureServices
. Both the host and app services are then available in Configure
and throughout the app.
A common use of dependency injection into the Startup
class is to inject:
- IHostingEnvironment to configure services by environment.
- IConfiguration to read configuration.
- ILoggerFactory to create a logger in
Startup.ConfigureServices
.
Most services are not available until the Configure
method is called.
Multiple Startup
When the app defines separate Startup
classes for different environments (for example, StartupDevelopment
), the appropriate Startup
class is selected at runtime. The class whose name suffix matches the current environment is prioritized. If the app is run in the Development environment and includes both a Startup
class and a StartupDevelopment
class, the StartupDevelopment
class is used. For more information, see Use multiple environments.
See The host for more information on the host. For information on handling errors during startup, see Startup exception handling.
The ConfigureServices method
The ConfigureServices method is:
- Optional.
- Called by the host before the
Configure
method to configure the app's services. - Where configuration options are set by convention.
What Apps Start At Boot
The host may configure some services before Startup
methods are called. For more information, see The host.
For features that require substantial setup, there are Add{Service}
extension methods on IServiceCollection. For example, AddDbContext, AddDefaultIdentity, AddEntityFrameworkStores, and AddRazorPages:
Start Application On Boot
Adding services to the service container makes them available within the app and in the Configure
method. The services are resolved via dependency injection or from ApplicationServices.
See SetCompatibilityVersion for more information on SetCompatibilityVersion
.
The Configure method
The Configure method is used to specify how the app responds to HTTP requests. The request pipeline is configured by adding middleware components to an IApplicationBuilder instance. IApplicationBuilder
is available to the Configure
method, but it isn't registered in the service container. Hosting creates an IApplicationBuilder
and passes it directly to Configure
.
The ASP.NET Core templates configure the pipeline with support for:
- ASP.NET Core MVC and Razor Pages
Each Use
extension method adds one or more middleware components to the request pipeline. For instance, UseStaticFiles configures middleware to serve static files.
Each middleware component in the request pipeline is responsible for invoking the next component in the pipeline or short-circuiting the chain, if appropriate.
Additional services, such as IHostingEnvironment
and ILoggerFactory
, or anything defined in ConfigureServices
, can be specified in the Configure
method signature. These services are injected if they're available.
For more information on how to use IApplicationBuilder
and the order of middleware processing, see ASP.NET Core Middleware.
Configure services without Startup
To configure services and the request processing pipeline without using a Startup
class, call ConfigureServices
and Configure
convenience methods on the host builder. Multiple calls to ConfigureServices
append to one another. If multiple Configure
method calls exist, the last Configure
call is used.
Extend Startup with startup filters
Use IStartupFilter:
- To configure middleware at the beginning or end of an app's Configure middleware pipeline without an explicit call to
Use{Middleware}
.IStartupFilter
is used by ASP.NET Core to add defaults to the beginning of the pipeline without having to make the app author explicitly register the default middleware.IStartupFilter
allows a different component callUse{Middleware}
on behalf of the app author. - To create a pipeline of
Configure
methods. IStartupFilter.Configure can set a middleware to run before or after middleware added by libraries.
IStartupFilter
implements Configure, which receives and returns an Action<IApplicationBuilder>
. An IApplicationBuilder defines a class to configure an app's request pipeline. For more information, see Create a middleware pipeline with IApplicationBuilder.
Each IStartupFilter
can add one or more middlewares in the request pipeline. The filters are invoked in the order they were added to the service container. Filters may add middleware before or after passing control to the next filter, thus they append to the beginning or end of the app pipeline.
The following example demonstrates how to register a middleware with IStartupFilter
. The RequestSetOptionsMiddleware
middleware sets an options value from a query string parameter:
The RequestSetOptionsMiddleware
is configured in the RequestSetOptionsStartupFilter
class:
The IStartupFilter
is registered in the service container in ConfigureServices.
When a query string parameter for option
is provided, the middleware processes the value assignment before the ASP.NET Core middleware renders the response.
Middleware execution order is set by the order of IStartupFilter
registrations:
Multiple
IStartupFilter
implementations may interact with the same objects. If ordering is important, order theirIStartupFilter
service registrations to match the order that their middlewares should run.Libraries may add middleware with one or more
IStartupFilter
implementations that run before or after other app middleware registered withIStartupFilter
. To invoke anIStartupFilter
middleware before a middleware added by a library'sIStartupFilter
:- Position the service registration before the library is added to the service container.
- To invoke afterward, position the service registration after the library is added.
Mac Configure App That Start At Boot Camp
Add configuration at startup from an external assembly
Windows 10 Start App At Boot
An IHostingStartup implementation allows adding enhancements to an app at startup from an external assembly outside of the app's Startup
class. For more information, see Use hosting startup assemblies in ASP.NET Core.