Integration
Table Of Contents
- View Integration
- Contents
- View Integration
- Introduction to View Integration
- Integrating View with the Event Database
- Customizing LDAP Data
- Integrating View with Microsoft SCOM
- Setting Up a SCOM Integration
- Assign a Name to the View Connection Server Group
- View Management Packs
- Import the View Management Packs on the SCOM Server
- Enable a Proxy Agent on a View Connection Server Host or Security Server
- Run the Discovery Script in the Operations Manager Console
- View Connection Server and Security Server Managed Objects
- View Object Classes and Relationships
- Monitoring View in the Operations Manager Console
- Setting Up a SCOM Integration
- Examining PCoIP Session Statistics with WMI
- Setting Desktop Policies with Start Session Scripts
Examining PCoIP Session
Statistics with WMI 5
You can use Windows Management Instrumentation (WMI) to examine performance statistics for a PCoIP
session by using any of the supported programming interfaces, including C#, C++, PowerShell, VBScript,
VB .NET, and Windows Management Instrumentation Command-line (WMIC).
You can also use the Microsoft WMI Code Creator tool to generate VBScript, C#, and VB .NET code that
accesses the PCoIP performance counters. For more information about WMI, WMIC, and the WMI Code
Creator tool, go to http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/bb742610.aspx and
http://www.microsoft.com/downloads/en/details.aspx?familyid=2cc30a64-
ea15-4661-8da4-55bbc145c30e&dis playlang=en.
This section includes the following topics:
n
Using PCoIP Session Statistics
n
General PCoIP Session Statistics
n
PCoIP Audio Statistics
n
PCoIP Imaging Statistics
n
PCoIP Network Statistics
n
PCoIP USB Statistics
n
Examples of Using PowerShell cmdlets to Examine PCoIP Statistics
Using PCoIP Session Statistics
The WMI namespace for the PCoIP session statistics is root\CIMV2. The names of the statistics are
suffixed with (Server) or (Client), according to whether the statistic is recorded on the PCoIP server
or PCoIP client.
You can use Windows Performance Monitor (PerfMon) with the counters to calculate averages over a
specified sampling period. You must have administrator privileges to access the performance counters
remotely.
All statistics are reset to 0 when a PCoIP session is closed. If the WMI SessionDurationSeconds
property is a non-zero value and stays constant, the PCoIP server was forcefully ended or crashed. If the
SessionDurationSeconds property changes from a non-zero value to 0, the PCoIP session is closed.
VMware, Inc.
47










