Monitoring and Troubleshooting the WINS Server

Using System Monitor to Monitor WINS Activity

The System Monitor utility is the main tool for monitoring system performance. System Monitor can track various processes on the Windows system in real time. The utility uses a graphical display that you can use to view current data, or log data. You can specify specific elements or components that should be tracked on the local computer and remote computers. You can determine resource usage by monitoring trends. System Monitor can be displayed in a graph, histogram, or report format. System Monitor uses objects, counters and instances to monitor the system

System Monitor is a valuable tool when you need to monitor and troubleshoot WINS specific activity and traffic being passed between the WINS server and WINS clients. Through System Monitor, you can set counters to monitor:

To start System Monitor,

  1. Click Start, Administrative Tools, and then click Performance.
  2. When the Performance console opens, open System Monitor

The WINS performance counters that you can monitor to track WINS activity are:

How to track WINS activity through System Monitor

  1. Click Start, Administrative Tools, and then click Performance.
  2. When the Performance console opens, open System Monitor
  3. Click the Add button to add WINS specific counters.
  4. Select WINS Server beneath Performance objects
  5. In Select counters from list, select the counters that you want to track.
  6. Click Add.
  7. Click Close.

Viewing WINS Server Statistics

It is recommended to view WINS server statistics to monitor WINS server performance. WINS server statistics are automatically refreshed at 10 minute intervals. This is the default setting.

The information that you can determine from viewing WINS server statistics is summarized below:

How to view WINS server statistics

  1. Click Start, Administrative Tools, and then click WINS to open the WINS console.
  2. In the console tree, right-click the WINS server, and then select Display Server Statistics from the shortcut menu.
  3. If you want to update the server statistics which are displayed, click the Refresh button

How to automatically refresh WINS server statistics

  1. Click Start, Administrative Tools, and then click WINS to open the WINS console.
  2. In the console tree, right-click the WINS server, and then select Properties from the shortcut menu.
  3. On the General tab, select the Automatically update statistics every: checkbox.
  4. Use the Hours, Minutes, and Seconds boxes to specify the time interval for refreshing WINS server statistics.
  5. Click OK.

How to enable advanced logging on the WINS server

  1. Click Start, Administrative Tools, and then click WINS to open the WINS console.
  2. In the console tree, right-click the applicable WINS server, and then select Properties from the shortcut menu.
  3. Click the Advanced tab.
  4. Select the Log detailed events to Windows event log checkbox to enable the WINS service to log WINS specific events in the System log of the WINS server. It is recommended to enable this option for troubleshooting purposes.
  5. Click OK.

Troubleshooting the WINS server

A few recommendations for troubleshooting WINS servers are discussed below:

Troubleshooting WINS Clients

When a WINS client cannot access the WINS server, one of the first points you need to determine is to categorize the issue as either a server-end issue, or a client-end issue. Running the ipconfig/all command, and examining its output would assist in categorizing the issue.

  1. Open a command prompt window.
  2. Enter ipconfig /all.
  3. Verify the following:
    • Verify that the IP address of the primary WINS server is configured.
    • Verify that this IP address is the correct address
    • Verify that the address of the secondary WINS server is correct (if configured)
    • Verify that the node type is shown as Hybrid

If the output displayed by the ipconfig/all command is correct, you need to determine the following:

You can determine the above information by using the nbtstat.exe command-line utility:

  1. Enter nbtstat –r.
  2. If the results indicate that the WINS server is typically used for name resolution and not broadcasting, use the nbtstat.exe command-line utility again to determine whether an incorrectly cached NetBIOS name is the issue.
  3. To do this, enter nbtstat –c.

If after running ipconfig/all, nbtstat –r, and nbtstat –c; you verify that the correct information was displayed in the output of these commands; you need to determine the following:



Top 5 Free Networking Tools

Bookmark Monitoring and Troubleshooting the WINS Server

Latest Blog Posts


English English GermanGerman SpanishSpanish FrenchFrench ItalianItalian PortuguesePortuguese RussianRussian DutchDutch
GreekGreek HindiHindi JapaneseJapanese KoreanKorean ChineseChinese Chinese (Simplified)Chinese (Simplified) ArabicArabic

Copyright 2009 Tech-FAQ. All rights reserved. Privacy Policy.