Windows Management Instrumentation ( WMI) consists of a set of extensions to the that provides an interface through which components provide information and notification. WMI is 's implementation of the (WBEM) and (CIM) standards from the (DMTF). WMI allows (such as or ) to manage and, both locally and remotely.
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WMI comes preinstalled in and in newer Microsoft. It is available as a download for, and.
Microsoft also provides a to WMI called Windows Management Instrumentation Command-line ( WMIC). Contents • • • • • • • • • Purpose of WMI [ ] The purpose of WMI is to define a proprietary set of environment-independent specifications which allow management information to be shared between management applications. WMI prescribes standards and related technologies for Windows that work with existing management standards, such as (DMI) and. WMI complements these other standards by providing a uniform model. This model represents the managed environment through which management data from any source can be accessed in a common way. Development process [ ] Because WMI abstracts the manageable entities with CIM and a collection of providers, the development of a provider implies several steps.
The major steps can be summarized as follows: • Create the manageable entity model • Define a model • Implement the model • Create the WMI provider • Determine the provider type to implement • Determine the hosting model of the provider • Create the provider template with the ATL wizard • Implement the code logic in the provider • Register the provider with WMI and the system • Test the provider • Create consumer sample code. From the original on 24 February 2010. Retrieved 4 May 2018. From the original on 23 April 2007. Retrieved 4 May 2018.
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