![]() In particular, we’ll look at the performance counters we introduced in Part 1: Name in Performance Monitor We will show you how to collect IIS-related performance counters through PowerShell scripts, the Performance Monitor, and the IIS API. Performance counters report metrics from classes stored within a given IIS host, which makes it possible to query them with multiple techniques. ![]() In Part 1, we introduced some performance counter classes that are useful for monitoring the health and performance of IIS. In Windows, performance counters automatically collect data from a particular service, application, or driver, as well as from the operating system itself. We’ll also explain how to use a diagnostic tool to investigate memory leaks and high CPU utilization in your application pools and worker processes. In this post, we’ll show you how to use built-in IIS monitoring tools to access and graph performance counters, configure logging in IIS, and query your logs with Microsoft’s Log Parser Studio. ![]()
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