RE: IIS reporting/monitoring free tool

2013-02-28 Thread itli...@imcu.com
That is basically it.  The application developer says that brute force
testing on my server shows response time for 1000 pages on 10 accounts
concurrently have an average 1.55 second response with is below their
required 2.00 response.  But the users are showing as much as 5 minutes
from Get to Post. On their workstation on a 10/100 switch.  No WAN
traffic all on the same LAN and same SWITCH for 20 of the 23 users.  So
I am game for anything I can do to show the developer there are issues
my users can not live with.

But for now I am limited to their tools and their results.

Thanks for all the help.

 

 

From: Ken Schaefer [mailto:k...@adopenstatic.com] 
Posted At: Wednesday, February 27, 2013 5:01 PM
Posted To: itli...@imcu.com
Conversation: IIS reporting/monitoring free tool
Subject: RE: IIS reporting/monitoring free tool

 

The best way you are going to get a true picture of this if is you run
the tool on the client machine, or at the client's location. Not on the
server.

 

On the server you can look at the Time-Taken field in the IIS logs to
get some idea of how long it takes IIS to put the page onto the wire.
That's not the same as the client actually receiving the packet, and
doesn't take into account any proxies, accelerators, caches etc. between
the server and the client.

 

Anyway, if you have some more requirements, then perhaps we can help
with your searching. 

 

Cheers

Ken

 

From: itli...@imcu.com [mailto:itli...@imcu.com] 
Sent: Thursday, 28 February 2013 7:56 AM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: RE: IIS reporting/monitoring free tool

 

Solarwinds, didn't give me the results I wanted, I need to know how long
each page is taken to return to the client workstations for a particular
app.

Couldn't get AWSTATS to even give me one result.(Had it working on
another server last year but can not get this one to configure
properly.)

IIS reporter but it is only giving me active connections to IIS not per
page or duration times?

I saw Beta 7.0 had a IIS reporting tool but dev decided it wasn't need
for admin tools of IIS 7.5???

Seems like that would be a good thing, unless they were borrowing
someones code to get their results???

Anyways, thought I would try here??

 

 

From: Andrew S. Baker [mailto:asbz...@gmail.com] 
Posted At: Tuesday, February 26, 2013 10:31 AM
Posted To: itli...@imcu.com
Conversation: IIS reporting/monitoring free tool
Subject: Re: IIS reporting/monitoring free tool

 

Given the number of google entries that cover this request, what have
you already ruled out and why?




 

 

ASB
http://XeeMe.com/AndrewBaker http://xeeme.com/AndrewBaker 
Providing Virtual CIO Services (IT Operations  Information Security)
for the SMB market...

 

 

On Tue, Feb 26, 2013 at 10:19 AM, itli...@imcu.com itli...@imcu.com
wrote:

Looking for a free IIS monitoring or reporting tool for IIS 7.5 on
server 2008 r2.

Any suggestions?

~ Finally, powerful endpoint security that ISN'T a resource hog! ~
~ http://www.sunbeltsoftware.com/Business/VIPRE-Enterprise/  ~

---
To manage subscriptions click here:
http://lyris.sunbelt-software.com/read/my_forums/
or send an email to listmana...@lyris.sunbeltsoftware.com
with the body: unsubscribe ntsysadmin


~ Finally, powerful endpoint security that ISN'T a resource hog! ~
~ http://www.sunbeltsoftware.com/Business/VIPRE-Enterprise/  ~

---
To manage subscriptions click here: 
http://lyris.sunbelt-software.com/read/my_forums/
or send an email to listmana...@lyris.sunbeltsoftware.com
with the body: unsubscribe ntsysadmin

Re: IIS reporting/monitoring free tool

2013-02-28 Thread Kurt Buff
Fire up Wireshark on a mirror port on the switch to which those
clients are attached, and see what's happening.

BTW - don't just filter for traffic between the web server and the
client - make sure to capture all of the packets to and from the
clients during the test (though you will want to have no other
applications open on the clients to keep the traffic clean). You might
be surprised by DNS resolution slowness, bad cables or NICs, or
something else...

Kurt

On Thu, Feb 28, 2013 at 10:13 AM, itli...@imcu.com itli...@imcu.com wrote:

 That is basically it.  The application developer says that brute force
 testing on my server shows response time for 1000 pages on 10 accounts
 concurrently have an average 1.55 second response with is below their
 required 2.00 response.  But the users are showing as much as 5 minutes from
 Get to Post. On their workstation on a 10/100 switch.  No WAN traffic all on
 the same LAN and same SWITCH for 20 of the 23 users.  So I am game for
 anything I can do to show the developer there are issues my users can not
 live with.

 But for now I am limited to their tools and their results.

 Thanks for all the help.





 From: Ken Schaefer [mailto:k...@adopenstatic.com]
 Posted At: Wednesday, February 27, 2013 5:01 PM
 Posted To: itli...@imcu.com
 Conversation: IIS reporting/monitoring free tool
 Subject: RE: IIS reporting/monitoring free tool



 The best way you are going to get a true picture of this if is you run the
 tool on the client machine, or at the client’s location. Not on the server.



 On the server you can look at the Time-Taken field in the IIS logs to get
 some idea of how long it takes IIS to put the page onto the wire. That’s not
 the same as the client actually receiving the packet, and doesn’t take into
 account any proxies, accelerators, caches etc. between the server and the
 client.



 Anyway, if you have some more requirements, then perhaps we can help with
 your searching.



 Cheers

 Ken



 From: itli...@imcu.com [mailto:itli...@imcu.com]
 Sent: Thursday, 28 February 2013 7:56 AM
 To: NT System Admin Issues
 Subject: RE: IIS reporting/monitoring free tool



 Solarwinds, didn’t give me the results I wanted, I need to know how long
 each page is taken to return to the client workstations for a particular
 app.

 Couldn’t get AWSTATS to even give me one result.(Had it working on another
 server last year but can not get this one to configure properly.)

 IIS reporter but it is only giving me active connections to IIS not per
 page or duration times?

 I saw Beta 7.0 had a IIS reporting tool but dev decided it wasn’t need for
 admin tools of IIS 7.5???

 Seems like that would be a good thing, unless they were borrowing someones
 code to get their results???

 Anyways, thought I would try here??





 From: Andrew S. Baker [mailto:asbz...@gmail.com]
 Posted At: Tuesday, February 26, 2013 10:31 AM
 Posted To: itli...@imcu.com
 Conversation: IIS reporting/monitoring free tool
 Subject: Re: IIS reporting/monitoring free tool



 Given the number of google entries that cover this request, what have you
 already ruled out and why?






 ASB
 http://XeeMe.com/AndrewBaker
 Providing Virtual CIO Services (IT Operations  Information Security) for
 the SMB market…





 On Tue, Feb 26, 2013 at 10:19 AM, itli...@imcu.com itli...@imcu.com
 wrote:

 Looking for a free IIS monitoring or reporting tool for IIS 7.5 on server
 2008 r2.

 Any suggestions?

 ~ Finally, powerful endpoint security that ISN'T a resource hog! ~
 ~ http://www.sunbeltsoftware.com/Business/VIPRE-Enterprise/  ~

 ---
 To manage subscriptions click here:
 http://lyris.sunbelt-software.com/read/my_forums/
 or send an email to listmana...@lyris.sunbeltsoftware.com
 with the body: unsubscribe ntsysadmin

 ~ Finally, powerful endpoint security that ISN'T a resource hog! ~
 ~ http://www.sunbeltsoftware.com/Business/VIPRE-Enterprise/  ~

 ---
 To manage subscriptions click here:
 http://lyris.sunbelt-software.com/read/my_forums/
 or send an email to listmana...@lyris.sunbeltsoftware.com
 with the body: unsubscribe ntsysadmin

~ Finally, powerful endpoint security that ISN'T a resource hog! ~
~ http://www.sunbeltsoftware.com/Business/VIPRE-Enterprise/  ~

---
To manage subscriptions click here: 
http://lyris.sunbelt-software.com/read/my_forums/
or send an email to listmana...@lyris.sunbeltsoftware.com
with the body: unsubscribe ntsysadmin



Re: IIS reporting/monitoring free tool

2013-02-28 Thread Kurt Buff
That's pretty cool. I'm going to try that.

Kurt

On Thu, Feb 28, 2013 at 12:02 PM, Kevin Lundy klu...@gmail.com wrote:

 I think you are looking for something like http watch

 http://www.httpwatch.com/



 On Thu, Feb 28, 2013 at 1:13 PM, itli...@imcu.com itli...@imcu.com
 wrote:

 That is basically it.  The application developer says that brute force
 testing on my server shows response time for 1000 pages on 10 accounts
 concurrently have an average 1.55 second response with is below their
 required 2.00 response.  But the users are showing as much as 5 minutes from
 Get to Post. On their workstation on a 10/100 switch.  No WAN traffic all on
 the same LAN and same SWITCH for 20 of the 23 users.  So I am game for
 anything I can do to show the developer there are issues my users can not
 live with.

 But for now I am limited to their tools and their results.

 Thanks for all the help.





 From: Ken Schaefer [mailto:k...@adopenstatic.com]
 Posted At: Wednesday, February 27, 2013 5:01 PM


 Posted To: itli...@imcu.com
 Conversation: IIS reporting/monitoring free tool
 Subject: RE: IIS reporting/monitoring free tool



 The best way you are going to get a true picture of this if is you run
 the tool on the client machine, or at the client’s location. Not on the
 server.



 On the server you can look at the Time-Taken field in the IIS logs to get
 some idea of how long it takes IIS to put the page onto the wire. That’s not
 the same as the client actually receiving the packet, and doesn’t take into
 account any proxies, accelerators, caches etc. between the server and the
 client.



 Anyway, if you have some more requirements, then perhaps we can help with
 your searching.



 Cheers

 Ken



 From: itli...@imcu.com [mailto:itli...@imcu.com]
 Sent: Thursday, 28 February 2013 7:56 AM
 To: NT System Admin Issues
 Subject: RE: IIS reporting/monitoring free tool



 Solarwinds, didn’t give me the results I wanted, I need to know how long
 each page is taken to return to the client workstations for a particular
 app.

 Couldn’t get AWSTATS to even give me one result.(Had it working on
 another server last year but can not get this one to configure properly.)

 IIS reporter but it is only giving me active connections to IIS not per
 page or duration times?

 I saw Beta 7.0 had a IIS reporting tool but dev decided it wasn’t need
 for admin tools of IIS 7.5???

 Seems like that would be a good thing, unless they were borrowing
 someones code to get their results???

 Anyways, thought I would try here??





 From: Andrew S. Baker [mailto:asbz...@gmail.com]
 Posted At: Tuesday, February 26, 2013 10:31 AM
 Posted To: itli...@imcu.com
 Conversation: IIS reporting/monitoring free tool
 Subject: Re: IIS reporting/monitoring free tool



 Given the number of google entries that cover this request, what have you
 already ruled out and why?






 ASB
 http://XeeMe.com/AndrewBaker
 Providing Virtual CIO Services (IT Operations  Information Security) for
 the SMB market…





 On Tue, Feb 26, 2013 at 10:19 AM, itli...@imcu.com itli...@imcu.com
 wrote:

 Looking for a free IIS monitoring or reporting tool for IIS 7.5 on server
 2008 r2.

 Any suggestions?

 ~ Finally, powerful endpoint security that ISN'T a resource hog! ~
 ~ http://www.sunbeltsoftware.com/Business/VIPRE-Enterprise/  ~

 ---
 To manage subscriptions click here:
 http://lyris.sunbelt-software.com/read/my_forums/
 or send an email to listmana...@lyris.sunbeltsoftware.com
 with the body: unsubscribe ntsysadmin

 ~ Finally, powerful endpoint security that ISN'T a resource hog! ~
 ~ http://www.sunbeltsoftware.com/Business/VIPRE-Enterprise/  ~

 ---
 To manage subscriptions click here:
 http://lyris.sunbelt-software.com/read/my_forums/
 or send an email to listmana...@lyris.sunbeltsoftware.com
 with the body: unsubscribe ntsysadmin


 ~ Finally, powerful endpoint security that ISN'T a resource hog! ~
 ~ http://www.sunbeltsoftware.com/Business/VIPRE-Enterprise/  ~

 ---
 To manage subscriptions click here:
 http://lyris.sunbelt-software.com/read/my_forums/
 or send an email to listmana...@lyris.sunbeltsoftware.com
 with the body: unsubscribe ntsysadmin

~ Finally, powerful endpoint security that ISN'T a resource hog! ~
~ http://www.sunbeltsoftware.com/Business/VIPRE-Enterprise/  ~

---
To manage subscriptions click here: 
http://lyris.sunbelt-software.com/read/my_forums/
or send an email to listmana...@lyris.sunbeltsoftware.com
with the body: unsubscribe ntsysadmin



RE: IIS reporting/monitoring free tool

2013-02-28 Thread Ziots, Edward
Fiddler can tell you some of the same information but httpwatch is a good tool 
to troubleshoot client side issues when looking at web information. 

Z

Edward E. Ziots, CISSP, Security +, Network +
Security Engineer
Lifespan Organization
ezi...@lifespan.org

This electronic message and any attachments may be privileged and confidential 
and protected from disclosure. If you are reading this message, but are not the 
intended recipient, nor an employee or agent responsible for delivering this 
message to the intended recipient, you are hereby notified that you are 
strictly prohibited from copying, printing, forwarding or otherwise 
disseminating this communication. If you have received this communication in 
error, please immediately notify the sender by replying to the message. Then, 
delete the message from your computer. Thank you.




-Original Message-
From: Kurt Buff [mailto:kurt.b...@gmail.com] 
Sent: Thursday, February 28, 2013 3:19 PM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: Re: IIS reporting/monitoring free tool

That's pretty cool. I'm going to try that.

Kurt

On Thu, Feb 28, 2013 at 12:02 PM, Kevin Lundy klu...@gmail.com wrote:

 I think you are looking for something like http watch

 http://www.httpwatch.com/



 On Thu, Feb 28, 2013 at 1:13 PM, itli...@imcu.com itli...@imcu.com
 wrote:

 That is basically it.  The application developer says that brute 
 force testing on my server shows response time for 1000 pages on 10 
 accounts concurrently have an average 1.55 second response with is 
 below their required 2.00 response.  But the users are showing as 
 much as 5 minutes from Get to Post. On their workstation on a 10/100 
 switch.  No WAN traffic all on the same LAN and same SWITCH for 20 of 
 the 23 users.  So I am game for anything I can do to show the 
 developer there are issues my users can not live with.

 But for now I am limited to their tools and their results.

 Thanks for all the help.





 From: Ken Schaefer [mailto:k...@adopenstatic.com] Posted At: 
 Wednesday, February 27, 2013 5:01 PM


 Posted To: itli...@imcu.com
 Conversation: IIS reporting/monitoring free tool
 Subject: RE: IIS reporting/monitoring free tool



 The best way you are going to get a true picture of this if is you 
 run the tool on the client machine, or at the client’s location. Not 
 on the server.



 On the server you can look at the Time-Taken field in the IIS logs to 
 get some idea of how long it takes IIS to put the page onto the wire. 
 That’s not the same as the client actually receiving the packet, and 
 doesn’t take into account any proxies, accelerators, caches etc. 
 between the server and the client.



 Anyway, if you have some more requirements, then perhaps we can help 
 with your searching.



 Cheers

 Ken



 From: itli...@imcu.com [mailto:itli...@imcu.com]
 Sent: Thursday, 28 February 2013 7:56 AM
 To: NT System Admin Issues
 Subject: RE: IIS reporting/monitoring free tool



 Solarwinds, didn’t give me the results I wanted, I need to know how 
 long each page is taken to return to the client workstations for a 
 particular app.

 Couldn’t get AWSTATS to even give me one result.(Had it working on 
 another server last year but can not get this one to configure 
 properly.)

 IIS reporter but it is only giving me active connections to IIS not 
 per page or duration times?

 I saw Beta 7.0 had a IIS reporting tool but dev decided it wasn’t 
 need for admin tools of IIS 7.5???

 Seems like that would be a good thing, unless they were borrowing 
 someones code to get their results???

 Anyways, thought I would try here??





 From: Andrew S. Baker [mailto:asbz...@gmail.com] Posted At: Tuesday, 
 February 26, 2013 10:31 AM Posted To: itli...@imcu.com
 Conversation: IIS reporting/monitoring free tool
 Subject: Re: IIS reporting/monitoring free tool



 Given the number of google entries that cover this request, what have 
 you already ruled out and why?






 ASB
 http://XeeMe.com/AndrewBaker
 Providing Virtual CIO Services (IT Operations  Information Security) 
 for the SMB market…





 On Tue, Feb 26, 2013 at 10:19 AM, itli...@imcu.com itli...@imcu.com
 wrote:

 Looking for a free IIS monitoring or reporting tool for IIS 7.5 on 
 server
 2008 r2.

 Any suggestions?

 ~ Finally, powerful endpoint security that ISN'T a resource hog! ~ ~ 
 http://www.sunbeltsoftware.com/Business/VIPRE-Enterprise/  ~

 ---
 To manage subscriptions click here:
 http://lyris.sunbelt-software.com/read/my_forums/
 or send an email to listmana...@lyris.sunbeltsoftware.com
 with the body: unsubscribe ntsysadmin

 ~ Finally, powerful endpoint security that ISN'T a resource hog! ~ ~ 
 http://www.sunbeltsoftware.com/Business/VIPRE-Enterprise/  ~

 ---
 To manage subscriptions click here:
 http://lyris.sunbelt-software.com/read/my_forums/
 or send an email to listmana...@lyris.sunbeltsoftware.com
 with the body: unsubscribe ntsysadmin


 ~ Finally, powerful endpoint security that ISN'T a resource hog

Re: IIS reporting/monitoring free tool

2013-02-28 Thread Steven Peck
For basic testing from a client machine you can also use F12 in IE.
Go to Network, Start Capture
Type in the URL
Click around, do stuff.  Stop Capture.

It will at least get you response request information, various calls etc.
and it's most likely on the client system already.

That said, play around with the other tools, this just happens to already
be there. :)





On Thu, Feb 28, 2013 at 12:47 PM, Ziots, Edward ezi...@lifespan.org wrote:

 Fiddler can tell you some of the same information but httpwatch is a good
 tool to troubleshoot client side issues when looking at web information.

 Z

 Edward E. Ziots, CISSP, Security +, Network +
 Security Engineer
 Lifespan Organization
 ezi...@lifespan.org

 This electronic message and any attachments may be privileged and
 confidential and protected from disclosure. If you are reading this
 message, but are not the intended recipient, nor an employee or agent
 responsible for delivering this message to the intended recipient, you are
 hereby notified that you are strictly prohibited from copying, printing,
 forwarding or otherwise disseminating this communication. If you have
 received this communication in error, please immediately notify the sender
 by replying to the message. Then, delete the message from your computer.
 Thank you.




 -Original Message-
 From: Kurt Buff [mailto:kurt.b...@gmail.com]
 Sent: Thursday, February 28, 2013 3:19 PM
 To: NT System Admin Issues
 Subject: Re: IIS reporting/monitoring free tool

 That's pretty cool. I'm going to try that.

 Kurt

 On Thu, Feb 28, 2013 at 12:02 PM, Kevin Lundy klu...@gmail.com wrote:
 
  I think you are looking for something like http watch
 
  http://www.httpwatch.com/
 
 
 
  On Thu, Feb 28, 2013 at 1:13 PM, itli...@imcu.com itli...@imcu.com
  wrote:
 
  That is basically it.  The application developer says that brute
  force testing on my server shows response time for 1000 pages on 10
  accounts concurrently have an average 1.55 second response with is
  below their required 2.00 response.  But the users are showing as
  much as 5 minutes from Get to Post. On their workstation on a 10/100
  switch.  No WAN traffic all on the same LAN and same SWITCH for 20 of
  the 23 users.  So I am game for anything I can do to show the
  developer there are issues my users can not live with.
 
  But for now I am limited to their tools and their results.
 
  Thanks for all the help.
 
 
 
 
 
  From: Ken Schaefer [mailto:k...@adopenstatic.com] Posted At:
  Wednesday, February 27, 2013 5:01 PM
 
 
  Posted To: itli...@imcu.com
  Conversation: IIS reporting/monitoring free tool
  Subject: RE: IIS reporting/monitoring free tool
 
 
 
  The best way you are going to get a true picture of this if is you
  run the tool on the client machine, or at the client’s location. Not
  on the server.
 
 
 
  On the server you can look at the Time-Taken field in the IIS logs to
  get some idea of how long it takes IIS to put the page onto the wire.
  That’s not the same as the client actually receiving the packet, and
  doesn’t take into account any proxies, accelerators, caches etc.
  between the server and the client.
 
 
 
  Anyway, if you have some more requirements, then perhaps we can help
  with your searching.
 
 
 
  Cheers
 
  Ken
 
 
 
  From: itli...@imcu.com [mailto:itli...@imcu.com]
  Sent: Thursday, 28 February 2013 7:56 AM
  To: NT System Admin Issues
  Subject: RE: IIS reporting/monitoring free tool
 
 
 
  Solarwinds, didn’t give me the results I wanted, I need to know how
  long each page is taken to return to the client workstations for a
  particular app.
 
  Couldn’t get AWSTATS to even give me one result.(Had it working on
  another server last year but can not get this one to configure
  properly.)
 
  IIS reporter but it is only giving me active connections to IIS not
  per page or duration times?
 
  I saw Beta 7.0 had a IIS reporting tool but dev decided it wasn’t
  need for admin tools of IIS 7.5???
 
  Seems like that would be a good thing, unless they were borrowing
  someones code to get their results???
 
  Anyways, thought I would try here??
 
 
 
 
 
  From: Andrew S. Baker [mailto:asbz...@gmail.com] Posted At: Tuesday,
  February 26, 2013 10:31 AM Posted To: itli...@imcu.com
  Conversation: IIS reporting/monitoring free tool
  Subject: Re: IIS reporting/monitoring free tool
 
 
 
  Given the number of google entries that cover this request, what have
  you already ruled out and why?
 
 
 
 
 
 
  ASB
  http://XeeMe.com/AndrewBaker
  Providing Virtual CIO Services (IT Operations  Information Security)
  for the SMB market…
 
 
 
 
 
  On Tue, Feb 26, 2013 at 10:19 AM, itli...@imcu.com itli...@imcu.com
  wrote:
 
  Looking for a free IIS monitoring or reporting tool for IIS 7.5 on
  server
  2008 r2.
 
  Any suggestions?
 
  ~ Finally, powerful endpoint security that ISN'T a resource hog! ~ ~
  http://www.sunbeltsoftware.com/Business/VIPRE-Enterprise/  ~
 
  ---
  To manage subscriptions

RE: IIS reporting/monitoring free tool

2013-02-28 Thread Ziots, Edward
Nice one I totally didn't know that on IE by default.

And this is my first email as a newly minted CISA,

Sincerely,
EZ

Edward E. Ziots, CISSP, CISA, Security +, Network +
Security Engineer
Lifespan Organization
ezi...@lifespan.org

This electronic message and any attachments may be privileged and confidential 
and protected from disclosure. If you are reading this message, but are not the 
intended recipient, nor an employee or agent responsible for delivering this 
message to the intended recipient, you are hereby notified that you are 
strictly prohibited from copying, printing, forwarding or otherwise 
disseminating this communication. If you have received this communication in 
error, please immediately notify the sender by replying to the message. Then, 
delete the message from your computer. Thank you.
[Description: Description: Lifespan]


From: Steven Peck [mailto:sep...@gmail.com]
Sent: Thursday, February 28, 2013 4:24 PM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: Re: IIS reporting/monitoring free tool

For basic testing from a client machine you can also use F12 in IE.
Go to Network, Start Capture
Type in the URL
Click around, do stuff.  Stop Capture.

It will at least get you response request information, various calls etc. and 
it's most likely on the client system already.

That said, play around with the other tools, this just happens to already be 
there. :)





On Thu, Feb 28, 2013 at 12:47 PM, Ziots, Edward 
ezi...@lifespan.orgmailto:ezi...@lifespan.org wrote:
Fiddler can tell you some of the same information but httpwatch is a good tool 
to troubleshoot client side issues when looking at web information.

Z

Edward E. Ziots, CISSP, Security +, Network +
Security Engineer
Lifespan Organization
ezi...@lifespan.orgmailto:ezi...@lifespan.org

This electronic message and any attachments may be privileged and confidential 
and protected from disclosure. If you are reading this message, but are not the 
intended recipient, nor an employee or agent responsible for delivering this 
message to the intended recipient, you are hereby notified that you are 
strictly prohibited from copying, printing, forwarding or otherwise 
disseminating this communication. If you have received this communication in 
error, please immediately notify the sender by replying to the message. Then, 
delete the message from your computer. Thank you.




-Original Message-
From: Kurt Buff [mailto:kurt.b...@gmail.commailto:kurt.b...@gmail.com]
Sent: Thursday, February 28, 2013 3:19 PM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: Re: IIS reporting/monitoring free tool

That's pretty cool. I'm going to try that.

Kurt

On Thu, Feb 28, 2013 at 12:02 PM, Kevin Lundy 
klu...@gmail.commailto:klu...@gmail.com wrote:

 I think you are looking for something like http watch

 http://www.httpwatch.com/



 On Thu, Feb 28, 2013 at 1:13 PM, itli...@imcu.commailto:itli...@imcu.com 
 itli...@imcu.commailto:itli...@imcu.com
 wrote:

 That is basically it.  The application developer says that brute
 force testing on my server shows response time for 1000 pages on 10
 accounts concurrently have an average 1.55 second response with is
 below their required 2.00 response.  But the users are showing as
 much as 5 minutes from Get to Post. On their workstation on a 10/100
 switch.  No WAN traffic all on the same LAN and same SWITCH for 20 of
 the 23 users.  So I am game for anything I can do to show the
 developer there are issues my users can not live with.

 But for now I am limited to their tools and their results.

 Thanks for all the help.





 From: Ken Schaefer 
 [mailto:k...@adopenstatic.commailto:k...@adopenstatic.com] Posted At:
 Wednesday, February 27, 2013 5:01 PM


 Posted To: itli...@imcu.commailto:itli...@imcu.com
 Conversation: IIS reporting/monitoring free tool
 Subject: RE: IIS reporting/monitoring free tool



 The best way you are going to get a true picture of this if is you
 run the tool on the client machine, or at the client's location. Not
 on the server.



 On the server you can look at the Time-Taken field in the IIS logs to
 get some idea of how long it takes IIS to put the page onto the wire.
 That's not the same as the client actually receiving the packet, and
 doesn't take into account any proxies, accelerators, caches etc.
 between the server and the client.



 Anyway, if you have some more requirements, then perhaps we can help
 with your searching.



 Cheers

 Ken



 From: itli...@imcu.commailto:itli...@imcu.com 
 [mailto:itli...@imcu.commailto:itli...@imcu.com]
 Sent: Thursday, 28 February 2013 7:56 AM
 To: NT System Admin Issues
 Subject: RE: IIS reporting/monitoring free tool



 Solarwinds, didn't give me the results I wanted, I need to know how
 long each page is taken to return to the client workstations for a
 particular app.

 Couldn't get AWSTATS to even give me one result.(Had it working on
 another server last year but can not get this one to configure
 properly.)

 IIS reporter but it is only giving

RE: IIS reporting/monitoring free tool (UNCLASSIFIED)

2013-02-28 Thread Kent, Larry J CTR (US)
Classification: UNCLASSIFIED
Caveats: FOUO

Finally! Congrats again

-Original Message-
From: Ziots, Edward [mailto:ezi...@lifespan.org] 
Sent: Thursday, February 28, 2013 4:42 PM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: RE: IIS reporting/monitoring free tool

Nice one I totally didn't know that on IE by default. 

 

And this is my first email as a newly minted CISA, 

 

Sincerely,

EZ

 

Edward E. Ziots, CISSP, CISA, Security +, Network +

Security Engineer

Lifespan Organization

ezi...@lifespan.org

 

This electronic message and any attachments may be privileged and confidential 
and protected from disclosure. If you are reading this message, but are not the 
intended recipient, nor an employee or agent responsible for delivering this 
message to the intended recipient, you are hereby notified that you are 
strictly prohibited from copying, printing, forwarding or otherwise 
disseminating this communication. If you have received this communication in 
error, please immediately notify the sender by replying to the message. Then, 
delete the message from your computer. Thank you.

Description: Description: Lifespan

 

 

From: Steven Peck [mailto:sep...@gmail.com]
Sent: Thursday, February 28, 2013 4:24 PM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: Re: IIS reporting/monitoring free tool

 

For basic testing from a client machine you can also use F12 in IE.  

Go to Network, Start Capture

Type in the URL

Click around, do stuff.  Stop Capture.

 

It will at least get you response request information, various calls etc. and 
it's most likely on the client system already.

 

That said, play around with the other tools, this just happens to already be 
there. :)

 

 



 

On Thu, Feb 28, 2013 at 12:47 PM, Ziots, Edward ezi...@lifespan.org wrote:

Fiddler can tell you some of the same information but httpwatch is a good tool 
to troubleshoot client side issues when looking at web information.

Z

Edward E. Ziots, CISSP, Security +, Network + Security Engineer Lifespan 
Organization ezi...@lifespan.org

This electronic message and any attachments may be privileged and confidential 
and protected from disclosure. If you are reading this message, but are not the 
intended recipient, nor an employee or agent responsible for delivering this 
message to the intended recipient, you are hereby notified that you are 
strictly prohibited from copying, printing, forwarding or otherwise 
disseminating this communication. If you have received this communication in 
error, please immediately notify the sender by replying to the message. Then, 
delete the message from your computer. Thank you.





-Original Message-
From: Kurt Buff [mailto:kurt.b...@gmail.com]
Sent: Thursday, February 28, 2013 3:19 PM
To: NT System Admin Issues

Subject: Re: IIS reporting/monitoring free tool

That's pretty cool. I'm going to try that.

Kurt

On Thu, Feb 28, 2013 at 12:02 PM, Kevin Lundy klu...@gmail.com wrote:

 I think you are looking for something like http watch

 http://www.httpwatch.com/



 On Thu, Feb 28, 2013 at 1:13 PM, itli...@imcu.com itli...@imcu.com
 wrote:

 That is basically it.  The application developer says that brute 
 force testing on my server shows response time for 1000 pages on 10 
 accounts concurrently have an average 1.55 second response with is 
 below their required 2.00 response.  But the users are showing as 
 much as 5 minutes from Get to Post. On their workstation on a 10/100 
 switch.  No WAN traffic all on the same LAN and same SWITCH for 20 of 
 the 23 users.  So I am game for anything I can do to show the 
 developer there are issues my users can not live with.

 But for now I am limited to their tools and their results.

 Thanks for all the help.





 From: Ken Schaefer [mailto:k...@adopenstatic.com] Posted At:
 Wednesday, February 27, 2013 5:01 PM


 Posted To: itli...@imcu.com
 Conversation: IIS reporting/monitoring free tool
 Subject: RE: IIS reporting/monitoring free tool



 The best way you are going to get a true picture of this if is you 
 run the tool on the client machine, or at the client's location. Not 
 on the server.



 On the server you can look at the Time-Taken field in the IIS logs to 
 get some idea of how long it takes IIS to put the page onto the wire.
 That's not the same as the client actually receiving the packet, and 
 doesn't take into account any proxies, accelerators, caches etc.
 between the server and the client.



 Anyway, if you have some more requirements, then perhaps we can help 
 with your searching.



 Cheers

 Ken



 From: itli...@imcu.com [mailto:itli...@imcu.com]
 Sent: Thursday, 28 February 2013 7:56 AM
 To: NT System Admin Issues
 Subject: RE: IIS reporting/monitoring free tool



 Solarwinds, didn't give me the results I wanted, I need to know how 
 long each page is taken to return to the client workstations for a 
 particular app.

 Couldn't get AWSTATS to even give me one result.(Had it working on 
 another server last year but can

Re: IIS reporting/monitoring free tool

2013-02-28 Thread Steven Peck
Congrats and virtually no one knows it's there and has been there for years
:)
I learned about it when I pretended I could make themes for a web site.
Reality has since delivered it's verdict.

On Thu, Feb 28, 2013 at 1:41 PM, Ziots, Edward ezi...@lifespan.org wrote:

  Nice one I totally didn’t know that on IE by default. 

 ** **

 And this is my first email as a newly minted CISA, 

 ** **

 Sincerely,

 EZ

 ** **

 Edward E. Ziots, CISSP, CISA, Security +, Network +

 Security Engineer

 Lifespan Organization

 ezi...@lifespan.org

 ** **

 This electronic message and any attachments may be privileged and
 confidential and protected from disclosure. If you are reading this
 message, but are not the intended recipient, nor an employee or agent
 responsible for delivering this message to the intended recipient, you are
 hereby notified that you are strictly prohibited from copying, printing,
 forwarding or otherwise disseminating this communication. If you have
 received this communication in error, please immediately notify the sender
 by replying to the message. Then, delete the message from your computer.
 Thank you.

 *[image: Description: Description: Lifespan]*

 ** **

 ** **

 *From:* Steven Peck [mailto:sep...@gmail.com]
 *Sent:* Thursday, February 28, 2013 4:24 PM

 *To:* NT System Admin Issues
 *Subject:* Re: IIS reporting/monitoring free tool

  ** **

 For basic testing from a client machine you can also use F12 in IE.  

 Go to Network, Start Capture

 Type in the URL

 Click around, do stuff.  Stop Capture.

  

 It will at least get you response request information, various calls etc.
 and it's most likely on the client system already.

  

 That said, play around with the other tools, this just happens to already
 be there. :)

  

  



  

 On Thu, Feb 28, 2013 at 12:47 PM, Ziots, Edward ezi...@lifespan.org
 wrote:

 Fiddler can tell you some of the same information but httpwatch is a good
 tool to troubleshoot client side issues when looking at web information.

 Z

 Edward E. Ziots, CISSP, Security +, Network +
 Security Engineer
 Lifespan Organization
 ezi...@lifespan.org

 This electronic message and any attachments may be privileged and
 confidential and protected from disclosure. If you are reading this
 message, but are not the intended recipient, nor an employee or agent
 responsible for delivering this message to the intended recipient, you are
 hereby notified that you are strictly prohibited from copying, printing,
 forwarding or otherwise disseminating this communication. If you have
 received this communication in error, please immediately notify the sender
 by replying to the message. Then, delete the message from your computer.
 Thank you.





 -Original Message-
 From: Kurt Buff [mailto:kurt.b...@gmail.com]
 Sent: Thursday, February 28, 2013 3:19 PM
 To: NT System Admin Issues

 Subject: Re: IIS reporting/monitoring free tool

 That's pretty cool. I'm going to try that.

 Kurt

 On Thu, Feb 28, 2013 at 12:02 PM, Kevin Lundy klu...@gmail.com wrote:
 
  I think you are looking for something like http watch
 
  http://www.httpwatch.com/
 
 
 
  On Thu, Feb 28, 2013 at 1:13 PM, itli...@imcu.com itli...@imcu.com
  wrote:
 
  That is basically it.  The application developer says that brute
  force testing on my server shows response time for 1000 pages on 10
  accounts concurrently have an average 1.55 second response with is
  below their required 2.00 response.  But the users are showing as
  much as 5 minutes from Get to Post. On their workstation on a 10/100
  switch.  No WAN traffic all on the same LAN and same SWITCH for 20 of
  the 23 users.  So I am game for anything I can do to show the
  developer there are issues my users can not live with.
 
  But for now I am limited to their tools and their results.
 
  Thanks for all the help.
 
 
 
 
 
  From: Ken Schaefer [mailto:k...@adopenstatic.com] Posted At:
  Wednesday, February 27, 2013 5:01 PM
 
 
  Posted To: itli...@imcu.com
  Conversation: IIS reporting/monitoring free tool
  Subject: RE: IIS reporting/monitoring free tool
 
 
 
  The best way you are going to get a true picture of this if is you
  run the tool on the client machine, or at the client’s location. Not
  on the server.
 
 
 
  On the server you can look at the Time-Taken field in the IIS logs to
  get some idea of how long it takes IIS to put the page onto the wire.
  That’s not the same as the client actually receiving the packet, and
  doesn’t take into account any proxies, accelerators, caches etc.
  between the server and the client.
 
 
 
  Anyway, if you have some more requirements, then perhaps we can help
  with your searching.
 
 
 
  Cheers
 
  Ken
 
 
 
  From: itli...@imcu.com [mailto:itli...@imcu.com]
  Sent: Thursday, 28 February 2013 7:56 AM
  To: NT System Admin Issues
  Subject: RE: IIS reporting/monitoring free tool

RE: IIS reporting/monitoring free tool

2013-02-28 Thread Tim Evans
Nice trick. I didn't know that was there. Looks pretty useful.

...Tim

From: Steven Peck [mailto:sep...@gmail.com]
Sent: Thursday, February 28, 2013 1:24 PM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: Re: IIS reporting/monitoring free tool

For basic testing from a client machine you can also use F12 in IE.
Go to Network, Start Capture
Type in the URL
Click around, do stuff.  Stop Capture.

It will at least get you response request information, various calls etc. and 
it's most likely on the client system already.

That said, play around with the other tools, this just happens to already be 
there. :)





On Thu, Feb 28, 2013 at 12:47 PM, Ziots, Edward 
ezi...@lifespan.orgmailto:ezi...@lifespan.org wrote:
Fiddler can tell you some of the same information but httpwatch is a good tool 
to troubleshoot client side issues when looking at web information.

Z

Edward E. Ziots, CISSP, Security +, Network +
Security Engineer
Lifespan Organization
ezi...@lifespan.orgmailto:ezi...@lifespan.org

This electronic message and any attachments may be privileged and confidential 
and protected from disclosure. If you are reading this message, but are not the 
intended recipient, nor an employee or agent responsible for delivering this 
message to the intended recipient, you are hereby notified that you are 
strictly prohibited from copying, printing, forwarding or otherwise 
disseminating this communication. If you have received this communication in 
error, please immediately notify the sender by replying to the message. Then, 
delete the message from your computer. Thank you.




-Original Message-
From: Kurt Buff [mailto:kurt.b...@gmail.commailto:kurt.b...@gmail.com]
Sent: Thursday, February 28, 2013 3:19 PM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: Re: IIS reporting/monitoring free tool

That's pretty cool. I'm going to try that.

Kurt

On Thu, Feb 28, 2013 at 12:02 PM, Kevin Lundy 
klu...@gmail.commailto:klu...@gmail.com wrote:

 I think you are looking for something like http watch

 http://www.httpwatch.com/



 On Thu, Feb 28, 2013 at 1:13 PM, itli...@imcu.commailto:itli...@imcu.com 
 itli...@imcu.commailto:itli...@imcu.com
 wrote:

 That is basically it.  The application developer says that brute
 force testing on my server shows response time for 1000 pages on 10
 accounts concurrently have an average 1.55 second response with is
 below their required 2.00 response.  But the users are showing as
 much as 5 minutes from Get to Post. On their workstation on a 10/100
 switch.  No WAN traffic all on the same LAN and same SWITCH for 20 of
 the 23 users.  So I am game for anything I can do to show the
 developer there are issues my users can not live with.

 But for now I am limited to their tools and their results.

 Thanks for all the help.





 From: Ken Schaefer 
 [mailto:k...@adopenstatic.commailto:k...@adopenstatic.com] Posted At:
 Wednesday, February 27, 2013 5:01 PM


 Posted To: itli...@imcu.commailto:itli...@imcu.com
 Conversation: IIS reporting/monitoring free tool
 Subject: RE: IIS reporting/monitoring free tool



 The best way you are going to get a true picture of this if is you
 run the tool on the client machine, or at the client's location. Not
 on the server.



 On the server you can look at the Time-Taken field in the IIS logs to
 get some idea of how long it takes IIS to put the page onto the wire.
 That's not the same as the client actually receiving the packet, and
 doesn't take into account any proxies, accelerators, caches etc.
 between the server and the client.



 Anyway, if you have some more requirements, then perhaps we can help
 with your searching.



 Cheers

 Ken



 From: itli...@imcu.commailto:itli...@imcu.com 
 [mailto:itli...@imcu.commailto:itli...@imcu.com]
 Sent: Thursday, 28 February 2013 7:56 AM
 To: NT System Admin Issues
 Subject: RE: IIS reporting/monitoring free tool



 Solarwinds, didn't give me the results I wanted, I need to know how
 long each page is taken to return to the client workstations for a
 particular app.

 Couldn't get AWSTATS to even give me one result.(Had it working on
 another server last year but can not get this one to configure
 properly.)

 IIS reporter but it is only giving me active connections to IIS not
 per page or duration times?

 I saw Beta 7.0 had a IIS reporting tool but dev decided it wasn't
 need for admin tools of IIS 7.5???

 Seems like that would be a good thing, unless they were borrowing
 someones code to get their results???

 Anyways, thought I would try here??





 From: Andrew S. Baker [mailto:asbz...@gmail.commailto:asbz...@gmail.com] 
 Posted At: Tuesday,
 February 26, 2013 10:31 AM Posted To: 
 itli...@imcu.commailto:itli...@imcu.com
 Conversation: IIS reporting/monitoring free tool
 Subject: Re: IIS reporting/monitoring free tool



 Given the number of google entries that cover this request, what have
 you already ruled out and why?






 ASB
 http://XeeMe.com/AndrewBaker
 Providing Virtual CIO Services (IT Operations

RE: IIS reporting/monitoring free tool

2013-02-28 Thread Maglinger, Paul
Damn.  You had to show me that.  Now I can't bad mouth IE quite as much as I 
used to.

From: Steven Peck [mailto:sep...@gmail.com]
Sent: Thursday, February 28, 2013 3:24 PM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: Re: IIS reporting/monitoring free tool

For basic testing from a client machine you can also use F12 in IE.
Go to Network, Start Capture
Type in the URL
Click around, do stuff.  Stop Capture.

It will at least get you response request information, various calls etc. and 
it's most likely on the client system already.

That said, play around with the other tools, this just happens to already be 
there. :)





On Thu, Feb 28, 2013 at 12:47 PM, Ziots, Edward 
ezi...@lifespan.orgmailto:ezi...@lifespan.org wrote:
Fiddler can tell you some of the same information but httpwatch is a good tool 
to troubleshoot client side issues when looking at web information.

Z

Edward E. Ziots, CISSP, Security +, Network +
Security Engineer
Lifespan Organization
ezi...@lifespan.orgmailto:ezi...@lifespan.org

This electronic message and any attachments may be privileged and confidential 
and protected from disclosure. If you are reading this message, but are not the 
intended recipient, nor an employee or agent responsible for delivering this 
message to the intended recipient, you are hereby notified that you are 
strictly prohibited from copying, printing, forwarding or otherwise 
disseminating this communication. If you have received this communication in 
error, please immediately notify the sender by replying to the message. Then, 
delete the message from your computer. Thank you.




-Original Message-
From: Kurt Buff [mailto:kurt.b...@gmail.commailto:kurt.b...@gmail.com]
Sent: Thursday, February 28, 2013 3:19 PM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: Re: IIS reporting/monitoring free tool

That's pretty cool. I'm going to try that.

Kurt

On Thu, Feb 28, 2013 at 12:02 PM, Kevin Lundy 
klu...@gmail.commailto:klu...@gmail.com wrote:

 I think you are looking for something like http watch

 http://www.httpwatch.com/



 On Thu, Feb 28, 2013 at 1:13 PM, itli...@imcu.commailto:itli...@imcu.com 
 itli...@imcu.commailto:itli...@imcu.com
 wrote:

 That is basically it.  The application developer says that brute
 force testing on my server shows response time for 1000 pages on 10
 accounts concurrently have an average 1.55 second response with is
 below their required 2.00 response.  But the users are showing as
 much as 5 minutes from Get to Post. On their workstation on a 10/100
 switch.  No WAN traffic all on the same LAN and same SWITCH for 20 of
 the 23 users.  So I am game for anything I can do to show the
 developer there are issues my users can not live with.

 But for now I am limited to their tools and their results.

 Thanks for all the help.





 From: Ken Schaefer 
 [mailto:k...@adopenstatic.commailto:k...@adopenstatic.com] Posted At:
 Wednesday, February 27, 2013 5:01 PM


 Posted To: itli...@imcu.commailto:itli...@imcu.com
 Conversation: IIS reporting/monitoring free tool
 Subject: RE: IIS reporting/monitoring free tool



 The best way you are going to get a true picture of this if is you
 run the tool on the client machine, or at the client's location. Not
 on the server.



 On the server you can look at the Time-Taken field in the IIS logs to
 get some idea of how long it takes IIS to put the page onto the wire.
 That's not the same as the client actually receiving the packet, and
 doesn't take into account any proxies, accelerators, caches etc.
 between the server and the client.



 Anyway, if you have some more requirements, then perhaps we can help
 with your searching.



 Cheers

 Ken



 From: itli...@imcu.commailto:itli...@imcu.com 
 [mailto:itli...@imcu.commailto:itli...@imcu.com]
 Sent: Thursday, 28 February 2013 7:56 AM
 To: NT System Admin Issues
 Subject: RE: IIS reporting/monitoring free tool



 Solarwinds, didn't give me the results I wanted, I need to know how
 long each page is taken to return to the client workstations for a
 particular app.

 Couldn't get AWSTATS to even give me one result.(Had it working on
 another server last year but can not get this one to configure
 properly.)

 IIS reporter but it is only giving me active connections to IIS not
 per page or duration times?

 I saw Beta 7.0 had a IIS reporting tool but dev decided it wasn't
 need for admin tools of IIS 7.5???

 Seems like that would be a good thing, unless they were borrowing
 someones code to get their results???

 Anyways, thought I would try here??





 From: Andrew S. Baker [mailto:asbz...@gmail.commailto:asbz...@gmail.com] 
 Posted At: Tuesday,
 February 26, 2013 10:31 AM Posted To: 
 itli...@imcu.commailto:itli...@imcu.com
 Conversation: IIS reporting/monitoring free tool
 Subject: Re: IIS reporting/monitoring free tool



 Given the number of google entries that cover this request, what have
 you already ruled out and why?






 ASB
 http://XeeMe.com/AndrewBaker
 Providing Virtual CIO Services

Re: IIS reporting/monitoring free tool

2013-02-28 Thread kz20fl
I'm quite impressed with that too. Shows how good MS are at publicizing good 
features they develop (i.e. not at all)

Sent from my Blackberry, which may be an antique but delivers email RELIABLY

-Original Message-
From: Maglinger, Paul pmaglin...@scvl.com
Date: Thu, 28 Feb 2013 22:36:10 
To: NT System Admin Issuesntsysadmin@lyris.sunbelt-software.com
Reply-To: NT System Admin Issues 
ntsysadmin@lyris.sunbelt-software.comSubject: RE: IIS reporting/monitoring 
free tool

Damn.  You had to show me that.  Now I can't bad mouth IE quite as much as I 
used to.

From: Steven Peck [mailto:sep...@gmail.com]
Sent: Thursday, February 28, 2013 3:24 PM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: Re: IIS reporting/monitoring free tool

For basic testing from a client machine you can also use F12 in IE.
Go to Network, Start Capture
Type in the URL
Click around, do stuff.  Stop Capture.

It will at least get you response request information, various calls etc. and 
it's most likely on the client system already.

That said, play around with the other tools, this just happens to already be 
there. :)





On Thu, Feb 28, 2013 at 12:47 PM, Ziots, Edward 
ezi...@lifespan.orgmailto:ezi...@lifespan.org wrote:
Fiddler can tell you some of the same information but httpwatch is a good tool 
to troubleshoot client side issues when looking at web information.

Z

Edward E. Ziots, CISSP, Security +, Network +
Security Engineer
Lifespan Organization
ezi...@lifespan.orgmailto:ezi...@lifespan.org

This electronic message and any attachments may be privileged and confidential 
and protected from disclosure. If you are reading this message, but are not the 
intended recipient, nor an employee or agent responsible for delivering this 
message to the intended recipient, you are hereby notified that you are 
strictly prohibited from copying, printing, forwarding or otherwise 
disseminating this communication. If you have received this communication in 
error, please immediately notify the sender by replying to the message. Then, 
delete the message from your computer. Thank you.




-Original Message-
From: Kurt Buff [mailto:kurt.b...@gmail.commailto:kurt.b...@gmail.com]
Sent: Thursday, February 28, 2013 3:19 PM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: Re: IIS reporting/monitoring free tool

That's pretty cool. I'm going to try that.

Kurt

On Thu, Feb 28, 2013 at 12:02 PM, Kevin Lundy 
klu...@gmail.commailto:klu...@gmail.com wrote:

 I think you are looking for something like http watch

 http://www.httpwatch.com/



 On Thu, Feb 28, 2013 at 1:13 PM, itli...@imcu.commailto:itli...@imcu.com 
 itli...@imcu.commailto:itli...@imcu.com
 wrote:

 That is basically it.  The application developer says that brute
 force testing on my server shows response time for 1000 pages on 10
 accounts concurrently have an average 1.55 second response with is
 below their required 2.00 response.  But the users are showing as
 much as 5 minutes from Get to Post. On their workstation on a 10/100
 switch.  No WAN traffic all on the same LAN and same SWITCH for 20 of
 the 23 users.  So I am game for anything I can do to show the
 developer there are issues my users can not live with.

 But for now I am limited to their tools and their results.

 Thanks for all the help.





 From: Ken Schaefer 
 [mailto:k...@adopenstatic.commailto:k...@adopenstatic.com] Posted At:
 Wednesday, February 27, 2013 5:01 PM


 Posted To: itli...@imcu.commailto:itli...@imcu.com
 Conversation: IIS reporting/monitoring free tool
 Subject: RE: IIS reporting/monitoring free tool



 The best way you are going to get a true picture of this if is you
 run the tool on the client machine, or at the client's location. Not
 on the server.



 On the server you can look at the Time-Taken field in the IIS logs to
 get some idea of how long it takes IIS to put the page onto the wire.
 That's not the same as the client actually receiving the packet, and
 doesn't take into account any proxies, accelerators, caches etc.
 between the server and the client.



 Anyway, if you have some more requirements, then perhaps we can help
 with your searching.



 Cheers

 Ken



 From: itli...@imcu.commailto:itli...@imcu.com 
 [mailto:itli...@imcu.commailto:itli...@imcu.com]
 Sent: Thursday, 28 February 2013 7:56 AM
 To: NT System Admin Issues
 Subject: RE: IIS reporting/monitoring free tool



 Solarwinds, didn't give me the results I wanted, I need to know how
 long each page is taken to return to the client workstations for a
 particular app.

 Couldn't get AWSTATS to even give me one result.(Had it working on
 another server last year but can not get this one to configure
 properly.)

 IIS reporter but it is only giving me active connections to IIS not
 per page or duration times?

 I saw Beta 7.0 had a IIS reporting tool but dev decided it wasn't
 need for admin tools of IIS 7.5???

 Seems like that would be a good thing, unless they were borrowing
 someones code to get their results???

 Anyways

Re: IIS reporting/monitoring free tool

2013-02-28 Thread Kurt Buff
Damn nice, Good work.

Kurt

On Thu, Feb 28, 2013 at 1:41 PM, Ziots, Edward ezi...@lifespan.org wrote:

  Nice one I totally didn’t know that on IE by default. 

 ** **

 And this is my first email as a newly minted CISA, 

 ** **

 Sincerely,

 EZ

 ** **

 Edward E. Ziots, CISSP, CISA, Security +, Network +

 Security Engineer

 Lifespan Organization

 ezi...@lifespan.org

 ** **

 This electronic message and any attachments may be privileged and
 confidential and protected from disclosure. If you are reading this
 message, but are not the intended recipient, nor an employee or agent
 responsible for delivering this message to the intended recipient, you are
 hereby notified that you are strictly prohibited from copying, printing,
 forwarding or otherwise disseminating this communication. If you have
 received this communication in error, please immediately notify the sender
 by replying to the message. Then, delete the message from your computer.
 Thank you.

 *[image: Description: Description: Lifespan]*

 ** **

 ** **

 *From:* Steven Peck [mailto:sep...@gmail.com]
 *Sent:* Thursday, February 28, 2013 4:24 PM

 *To:* NT System Admin Issues
 *Subject:* Re: IIS reporting/monitoring free tool

  ** **

 For basic testing from a client machine you can also use F12 in IE.  

 Go to Network, Start Capture

 Type in the URL

 Click around, do stuff.  Stop Capture.

  

 It will at least get you response request information, various calls etc.
 and it's most likely on the client system already.

  

 That said, play around with the other tools, this just happens to already
 be there. :)

  

  



  

 On Thu, Feb 28, 2013 at 12:47 PM, Ziots, Edward ezi...@lifespan.org
 wrote:

 Fiddler can tell you some of the same information but httpwatch is a good
 tool to troubleshoot client side issues when looking at web information.

 Z

 Edward E. Ziots, CISSP, Security +, Network +
 Security Engineer
 Lifespan Organization
 ezi...@lifespan.org

 This electronic message and any attachments may be privileged and
 confidential and protected from disclosure. If you are reading this
 message, but are not the intended recipient, nor an employee or agent
 responsible for delivering this message to the intended recipient, you are
 hereby notified that you are strictly prohibited from copying, printing,
 forwarding or otherwise disseminating this communication. If you have
 received this communication in error, please immediately notify the sender
 by replying to the message. Then, delete the message from your computer.
 Thank you.





 -Original Message-
 From: Kurt Buff [mailto:kurt.b...@gmail.com]
 Sent: Thursday, February 28, 2013 3:19 PM
 To: NT System Admin Issues

 Subject: Re: IIS reporting/monitoring free tool

 That's pretty cool. I'm going to try that.

 Kurt

 On Thu, Feb 28, 2013 at 12:02 PM, Kevin Lundy klu...@gmail.com wrote:
 
  I think you are looking for something like http watch
 
  http://www.httpwatch.com/
 
 
 
  On Thu, Feb 28, 2013 at 1:13 PM, itli...@imcu.com itli...@imcu.com
  wrote:
 
  That is basically it.  The application developer says that brute
  force testing on my server shows response time for 1000 pages on 10
  accounts concurrently have an average 1.55 second response with is
  below their required 2.00 response.  But the users are showing as
  much as 5 minutes from Get to Post. On their workstation on a 10/100
  switch.  No WAN traffic all on the same LAN and same SWITCH for 20 of
  the 23 users.  So I am game for anything I can do to show the
  developer there are issues my users can not live with.
 
  But for now I am limited to their tools and their results.
 
  Thanks for all the help.
 
 
 
 
 
  From: Ken Schaefer [mailto:k...@adopenstatic.com] Posted At:
  Wednesday, February 27, 2013 5:01 PM
 
 
  Posted To: itli...@imcu.com
  Conversation: IIS reporting/monitoring free tool
  Subject: RE: IIS reporting/monitoring free tool
 
 
 
  The best way you are going to get a true picture of this if is you
  run the tool on the client machine, or at the client’s location. Not
  on the server.
 
 
 
  On the server you can look at the Time-Taken field in the IIS logs to
  get some idea of how long it takes IIS to put the page onto the wire.
  That’s not the same as the client actually receiving the packet, and
  doesn’t take into account any proxies, accelerators, caches etc.
  between the server and the client.
 
 
 
  Anyway, if you have some more requirements, then perhaps we can help
  with your searching.
 
 
 
  Cheers
 
  Ken
 
 
 
  From: itli...@imcu.com [mailto:itli...@imcu.com]
  Sent: Thursday, 28 February 2013 7:56 AM
  To: NT System Admin Issues
  Subject: RE: IIS reporting/monitoring free tool
 
 
 
  Solarwinds, didn’t give me the results I wanted, I need to know how
  long each page is taken to return to the client workstations for a
  particular app.
 
  Couldn’t

RE: IIS reporting/monitoring free tool

2013-02-27 Thread itli...@imcu.com
Solarwinds, didn't give me the results I wanted, I need to know how long
each page is taken to return to the client workstations for a particular
app.

Couldn't get AWSTATS to even give me one result.(Had it working on
another server last year but can not get this one to configure
properly.)

IIS reporter but it is only giving me active connections to IIS not per
page or duration times?

I saw Beta 7.0 had a IIS reporting tool but dev decided it wasn't need
for admin tools of IIS 7.5???

Seems like that would be a good thing, unless they were borrowing
someones code to get their results???

Anyways, thought I would try here??

 

 

From: Andrew S. Baker [mailto:asbz...@gmail.com] 
Posted At: Tuesday, February 26, 2013 10:31 AM
Posted To: itli...@imcu.com
Conversation: IIS reporting/monitoring free tool
Subject: Re: IIS reporting/monitoring free tool

 

Given the number of google entries that cover this request, what have
you already ruled out and why?




 

 

ASB
http://XeeMe.com/AndrewBaker http://xeeme.com/AndrewBaker 
Providing Virtual CIO Services (IT Operations  Information Security)
for the SMB market...

 

 

On Tue, Feb 26, 2013 at 10:19 AM, itli...@imcu.com itli...@imcu.com
wrote:

Looking for a free IIS monitoring or reporting tool for IIS 7.5 on
server 2008 r2.

Any suggestions?

~ Finally, powerful endpoint security that ISN'T a resource hog! ~
~ http://www.sunbeltsoftware.com/Business/VIPRE-Enterprise/  ~

---
To manage subscriptions click here:
http://lyris.sunbelt-software.com/read/my_forums/
or send an email to listmana...@lyris.sunbeltsoftware.com
with the body: unsubscribe ntsysadmin

 

~ Finally, powerful endpoint security that ISN'T a resource hog! ~
~ http://www.sunbeltsoftware.com/Business/VIPRE-Enterprise/  ~

---
To manage subscriptions click here:
http://lyris.sunbelt-software.com/read/my_forums/
or send an email to listmana...@lyris.sunbeltsoftware.com
with the body: unsubscribe ntsysadmin


~ Finally, powerful endpoint security that ISN'T a resource hog! ~
~ http://www.sunbeltsoftware.com/Business/VIPRE-Enterprise/  ~

---
To manage subscriptions click here: 
http://lyris.sunbelt-software.com/read/my_forums/
or send an email to listmana...@lyris.sunbeltsoftware.com
with the body: unsubscribe ntsysadmin

RE: IIS reporting/monitoring free tool

2013-02-27 Thread Ken Schaefer
The best way you are going to get a true picture of this if is you run the tool 
on the client machine, or at the client's location. Not on the server.

On the server you can look at the Time-Taken field in the IIS logs to get some 
idea of how long it takes IIS to put the page onto the wire. That's not the 
same as the client actually receiving the packet, and doesn't take into account 
any proxies, accelerators, caches etc. between the server and the client.

Anyway, if you have some more requirements, then perhaps we can help with your 
searching.

Cheers
Ken

From: itli...@imcu.com [mailto:itli...@imcu.com]
Sent: Thursday, 28 February 2013 7:56 AM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: RE: IIS reporting/monitoring free tool

Solarwinds, didn't give me the results I wanted, I need to know how long each 
page is taken to return to the client workstations for a particular app.
Couldn't get AWSTATS to even give me one result.(Had it working on another 
server last year but can not get this one to configure properly.)
IIS reporter but it is only giving me active connections to IIS not per page or 
duration times?
I saw Beta 7.0 had a IIS reporting tool but dev decided it wasn't need for 
admin tools of IIS 7.5???
Seems like that would be a good thing, unless they were borrowing someones code 
to get their results???
Anyways, thought I would try here??


From: Andrew S. Baker [mailto:asbz...@gmail.com]
Posted At: Tuesday, February 26, 2013 10:31 AM
Posted To: itli...@imcu.commailto:itli...@imcu.com
Conversation: IIS reporting/monitoring free tool
Subject: Re: IIS reporting/monitoring free tool

Given the number of google entries that cover this request, what have you 
already ruled out and why?






ASB
http://XeeMe.com/AndrewBakerhttp://xeeme.com/AndrewBaker
Providing Virtual CIO Services (IT Operations  Information Security) for the 
SMB market...




On Tue, Feb 26, 2013 at 10:19 AM, itli...@imcu.commailto:itli...@imcu.com 
itli...@imcu.commailto:itli...@imcu.com wrote:
Looking for a free IIS monitoring or reporting tool for IIS 7.5 on server 2008 
r2.
Any suggestions?

~ Finally, powerful endpoint security that ISN'T a resource hog! ~
~ http://www.sunbeltsoftware.com/Business/VIPRE-Enterprise/  ~

---
To manage subscriptions click here: 
http://lyris.sunbelt-software.com/read/my_forums/
or send an email to listmana...@lyris.sunbeltsoftware.com
with the body: unsubscribe ntsysadmin