WmiMonitor The WMI monitor tests the availability of WMI services on remote interfaces. WSMAN does everything that WMI does and is a more modern protocol for Windows monitoring. Monitor facts Class Name org.opennms.netmgt.poller.monitors.WmiMonitor Configuration and use Note that username, password, and domain credentials defined here override any defined in the wmi-config file. Best practice is to put credentials there instead of in the pollerd/collectd configuration. Table 1. Optional monitor-specific parameters for the WmiMonitor Parameter Description Default username The username to use when authenticating against the WMI host. none password The password to use when authenticating against the WMI host. none domain Windows domain where the user is located. You do not have to use the domain parameter if you use local user accounts. none matchType Tells the OpenNMS WMI system to deal with multiple instance results. Available match types are: all: all instances must comply to the compare operation. none: no instances should comply with the compare operation. some: only some (one or more) must comply with the compare operation. one: only one instance can comply with the compare operation. all wmiClass Class of instances within WMI. This class contains objects representing properties and methods available. Win32_ComputerSystem wmiObject Member of a WMI property set. For example, the Win32_ComputerSystem class contains properties that we can look at and poll. The default "WMI" service uses the "Status" property to determine if the system is running and if WMI is available. Status compareOp The compare operation tells the OpenNMS WMI poller plugins how to verify the nature (up, critical) of a specific property within WMI. In the event of unequal comparisons, the system will always have the WMI value (as retrieved from the target) on the left. Available compare operations are: EQ (equals) NEQ (not equals) GT (greater than) LT (less than) NOOP (no operation) The NOOP operation is a special case which always evaluates to a result code of "OK." EQ compareValue The value to use when performing a comparison against the wmiObject. OK service-name Name of the service to monitor. If there is a ~ at the beginning of the parameter, the rest of the string will be used as a regular expression pattern match, otherwise it will be considered an exact match. WMI retry Number of retries before the service is marked as down. 0 timeout Time in milliseconds to wait for a response. namespace Every WMI class exists in a namespace. The default namespace for most common classes is root/cimv2. It is possible to refer to WMI objects from other namespaces such as root/MicrosoftActiveDirectory. root/cimv2 Example The following example shows how to enable monitoring that already discovered WMI services are still running. <service name="WMI" interval="300000" user-defined="false" status="on"> <parameter key="retry" value="2" /> <parameter key="timeout" value="30000" /> <parameter key="matchType" value="all"/> <parameter key="wmiClass" value="Win32_ComputerSystem" /> <parameter key="wmiObject" value="Status" /> <parameter key="compareOp" value="EQ" /> <parameter key="compareValue" value="OK" /> <parameter key="service-name" value="WMI" /> </service> <monitor service="WMI" class-name="org.opennms.netmgt.poller.monitors.WmiMonitor" /> Win32ServiceMonitor WsManMonitor