> For the complete documentation index, see [llms.txt](https://docs.infotopics.com/llms.txt). Markdown versions of documentation pages are available by appending `.md` to page URLs; this page is available as [Markdown](https://docs.infotopics.com/mailscheduler/getting-started/setup/summary.md).

# Summary

A summary will be shown and MailScheduler will install and start whenever you hit `Start the Application`.

<figure><img src="/files/rkhPL8fWTMIaLCrgq5eN" alt=""><figcaption></figcaption></figure>

MailScheduler will now start. If MailScheduler can't start automatically, please use the commands below for the service manager of your choice to start MailScheduler.

<figure><img src="/files/QqY2kancIklxJOLH1RXc" alt=""><figcaption></figcaption></figure>

{% hint style="info" %}
If you don't see this message, please proceed to the [Troubleshoot](/mailscheduler/support/troubleshoot.md) section for assistance.
{% endhint %}

After the application has started you will be redirected to the configuration panel. There you can press `MailScheduler` in the left menu which opens a browser window that shows the backend. The credentials for this backend are the credentials you set at step 4 of the installation.&#x20;

{% hint style="info" %}
When the backend is not reachable in the browser, there is a problem with either DNS, Load balancer configuration or your firewall. You can verify if MailScheduler is running if the backend does show when using localhost instead of your domain name. (e.g. <https://localhost:\\[yourportnumber]/>) When it does appear when using localhost, check the firewall and network configuration for your domain name.
{% endhint %}

## Additional steps when running on Linux:

[Running on Linux](/mailscheduler/getting-started/setup/summary/running-on-linux.md)


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