Chapter 14: - Using 3rd Party Common Tools

Openfiles

-fd Flushes all the active buffers of an existing Event Trace Session to disk.

-[-]u [user [password]] User to Run As. Entering a * for the password produces a prompt for the password. The password is not displayed when you type it at the password prompt.

-rf <[[hh:]mm:]ss> Run the collection for specified period of time.

-y Answer yes to all questions without prompting.

-ets Send commands to Event Trace Sessions directly without saving or scheduling.

-mode <trace_mode [trace_mode ...]> Event Trace Session logger mode.

-ct <perfsystemcycle> Event Trace Session clock type.

Note: Where [-] is listed, an extra - negates the option. For example --r turns off the -r option.

Examples:

logman create counter perf_log -c "\Processor(_Total)\% Processor Time"

logman create trace trace_log -nb 16 256 -bs 64 -o c:\logfile

logman start perf_log

logman update perf_log -si 10 -f csv -v mmddhhmm

logman update trace_log -p "Windows Kernel Trace" (disk,net)

Openfiles

Note: This tool can be used in both Interactive Mode and Batch Mode. For details on scheduling this tool to run in batch mode see Using Batch Mode.

Queries or displays open files. Also queries, displays, or disconnects files opened by network users.

Note: Because the Dashboard automatically sets the allowable commands for this tool, the Dashboard screen for this utility does not contain a command line input field.

Relog

Note: This tool can be used in both Interactive Mode and Batch Mode. For details on scheduling this tool to run in batch mode see Using Batch Mode.

Extracts performance counters from performance counter logs into other formats, such as text-TSV (for tab-delimited text), text-CSV (for comma-delimited text), binary-BIN, or SQL.

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