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Get Link Speed - Win32_PerfRawData_Tcpip_NetworkInterface

I found Determining the network connection link speed and now I am trying to correlate the data from Win32_PerfRawData_Tcpip_NetworkInterface with Win32_NetworkAdapter (or Win32_NetworkAdapterConfiguration).

On the class Win32_PerfRawData_Tcpip_NetworkInterface I don't see any index or unique key that I can use to reference Win32_NetworkAdapterConfiguration or Win32_NetworkAdapter. I tried to use theNameinWin32_PerfRawData_Tcpip_NetworkInterface andWin32_NetworkAdapter`, but still they look different.

e.g.

Name: Intel(R) PRO/1000 PL Network Connection

vs

Name: Intel[R] PRO_1000 PL Network Connection

Any hints?

Thank you in advance,

Milde

===

Maybe that piece of code will help you to help me guys :)

# I got the DeviceID of a NIC and use it to get the "NetConnection ID":

$objWMIService = Win32::OLE->GetObject("winmgmts:\\\\$computer\\root\\CIMV2") or die "Exit: WMI connection failed. \n";
$colNicSetts = $objWMIService->ExecQuery(
              "SELECT * FROM Win32_NetworkAdapter Where DeviceID = '$ID'", "WQL", wbemFlagReturnImmediately | wbemFlagForwardOnly);

foreach my $objItem (in $colNicSetts){
    $NetConnID = $objItem->{NetConnectionID};    
}

# => $NetConnID stores "Intel(R) PRO/1000 PL Network Connection".
# Now I tried to get the Link Speed with sth. like that:

$collItems = $objWMIService->ExecQuery(
             "SELECT * FROM Win32_PerfRawData_Tcpip_NetworkInterface Where Name = '$NetConnID'", "WQL", wbemFlagReturnImmediately | wbemFlagForwardOnly);
foreach my $objItem (in $collItems){
    $LinkSpeed = $objItem->{CurrentBandwidth};
}
# "Win32_PerfRawData_Tcpip_NetworkInterface" contains "Intel[R] PRO_1000 PL Network" Connection
# "Intel(R) PRO/1000 PL Network Connection" != Intel[R] PRO_1000 PL Network Connection
# => $LinkSpeed empty
like image 797
Milde Avatar asked Dec 02 '09 12:12

Milde


3 Answers

OK. Thanks for posting the short script. While you were working on that, I was following a different track using DBD::WMI and digging through the docs to see if you had missed anything.

I could not find a better way (there must be one) than canonicalizing the names:

#!/usr/bin/perl

use strict; use warnings;

use DBI;
use Data::Dumper;

my $computer = '.';
($computer) = @ARGV if @ARGV;

my $dbh = DBI->connect("dbi:WMI:$computer", undef, undef,
    { RaiseError => 1},
);

print "=== From Win32_NetworkAdapter ===\n";

my $name = $dbh->selectall_arrayref(
    'SELECT * FROM Win32_NetworkAdapter WHERE DeviceID = 11'
)->[0]->[0]->{Name};

(my $canonname = $name) =~ s/[^A-Za-z0-9]/_/g;

print "Name: $name\nCanonical name: $canonname\n\n";

my $sth = $dbh->prepare(
    'SELECT * FROM Win32_PerfRawData_Tcpip_NetworkInterface'
);

$sth->execute;

print "=== From Win32_PerfRawData_Tcpip_NetworkInterface ===\n";

while (defined (my $adapter = $sth->fetchrow_arrayref )) {
    my $conf = $adapter->[0];
    my $perfname = $conf->{Name};
    (my $canonperfname = $perfname) =~ s/[^A-Za-z0-9]/_/g;
    if ( $canonperfname =~ /^$canonname/ ) {
        print "Name: $perfname\nCanonical name: $canonperfname\n";
        print $conf->{CurrentBandwidth}, "\n\n";
        last;
    }
}

Output:

=== From Win32_NetworkAdapter ===
Name: Intel(R) PRO/Wireless 3945ABG Network Connection
Canonical name: Intel_R__PRO_Wireless_3945ABG_Network_Connection

=== From Win32_PerfRawData_Tcpip_NetworkInterface ===
Name: Intel[R] PRO_Wireless 3945ABG Network Connection - Packet Scheduler Miniport
Canonical name: Intel_R__PRO_Wireless_3945ABG_Network_Connection___Packet_Scheduler_Miniport
54000000
like image 175
Sinan Ünür Avatar answered Sep 18 '22 01:09

Sinan Ünür


I just looked to my machine withe the WMI-Tools, because I thought, it must be easy ... ;-)
but it's not ...

But what I found on my machine was, the a concatenantion of the "Win32_NetworkAdapter.Name" + " __" + "Win32_NetworkAdapter.InterfaceIndex" results in the "Win32_PerfFormattedData_Tcpip_NetworkInterface.Name="NVIDIA nForce Networking Controller _2" [Regard the space too!].

Example from my machine:

Win32_NetworkAdapter.DeviceID="13"
Win32_NetworkAdapter.NetConnectionID="Local Area Connection 2"
Win32_NetworkAdapter.InterfaceIndex="2"
Win32_NetworkAdapter.Name="NVIDIA nForce Networking Controller"
Win32_PerfFormattedData_Tcpip_NetworkInterface="NVIDIA nForce Networking Controller _2"

I hope, I've understood your question right and this may help?!

br--mabra

like image 34
mabra Avatar answered Sep 18 '22 01:09

mabra


The only approach I was able to find was to use the Win32_PnPEntity class to get the DeviceName for the network adapter, then convert it into the InstanceName. This allows you to find a key value that you can use on other WMI tables (I used InterfaceIndex, but there are other choices in the Win32_NetworkAdapter class.

So at a high level:

  1. Get an instance of Win32_NetworkAdapter
  2. Use one of the two below WMI WQL queries to get the PnpEntity
  3. Convert the Win32_PNPEntity.Name into the InstanceName by replacing:
    1. ( with [
    2. ) with ]
    3. # \ / all with _
  4. Use that InstanceName to query the Win32_PerfFormattedData_Tcpip_NetworkInterface class

It is pretty convoluted, but since InstanceName is derrived from the PnPEntity Name, that is the only way I could find to get accurate mappings.

Here are the two ways I was able to get the PnPEntity instance for a NetworkAdapter:

ASSOCIATORS OF {Win32_NetworkAdapter.DeviceID='12'} WHERE ResultClass=Win32_PnPEntity

SELECT * FROM Win32_PNPEntity where DeviceID='PCI\\VEN_14E4&DEV_1684&SUBSYS_1309103C&REV_10\\4&11050A08&0&00E5'
like image 24
Greg Bray Avatar answered Sep 21 '22 01:09

Greg Bray