Configuring WMI remote access on the target computer Using an administrator account, logon the computer you want to monitor. Click WMI control , right-click, and then select Properties. Click Security and then select the user account used to access this computer. Ensure you grant the following permissions: Enable Account and Remote Account. Click Advanced , and then select the user account used to access this computer.
Click Edit , select this namespace and subnamespaces in the Apply to field, and then click OK. In the left navigation pane of Computer Management, click Services. The following procedure walks you through allowing WMI through the Windows Firewall: Using an administrator account, logon the computer you want to monitor.
In the left navigation pane, click Windows Firewall. In the left navigation pane, click Allow a program through Windows Firewall. This is not recommended, but it is necessary when monitoring a workgroup computer.
Disabling remote user account control does not disable local user account control functionality. Warning : The following procedure requires the modification or creation of a registry key.
Changing the registry can have adverse effects on your computer and may result in an unbootable system. Consider backing up your registry before making these changes. To disable remote UAC for a workgroup computer: Using an administrator account, logon the computer you want to monitor.
Type regedit. To re-enable remote UAC, change this value to 0. Using a non-admin local or domain account this must be configured on each system from which you want to monitor WMI counters A non-admin domain or local account requires additional permissions to access Win The following steps should only take a minute or two of your time.
This setting is usually all that needs to be changed to get WMI working. Steps 2 and 3 are typically not needed, but they might be in some circumstances. At this point go back and see if this fixes the problem. It might take a couple of minutes for the reports to re-generate. For reading WMI data on a remote server, a connection needs to be made from your management computer where our monitoring software is installed to the server that you're monitoring the target server.
This can only be done at the command prompt. Run the following on the target computer if it is running a Windows firewall:. If the account you are using to monitor the target server is NOT an administrator on the target server, you need to enable the non-administrator to interact with DCOM by following the simple steps listed here.
Once the WMI browser can access a remote machine, our products should be able to as well. Select the namespace for which you want to give a user or group access usually, Root , and then click Security. In the Security dialog box, click Add In the Select Users, Computers, or Groups dialog box, enter the name of the object user or group that you want to add.
Click Check Names to verify your entry and then click OK. You might have to change the location or click the Advanced button to query for objects. See the dialog box Help for more details. Windows Service monitor. Top tags how-to
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