Copyright © 1998-1999 Mark Russinovich | |
Last Updated
July 30, 1999 v3.0 |
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Introduction | Portmon is a GUI/device
driver combination that monitors and displays all serial and parallel port
activity on a system. It has advanced filtering and search capabilities that
make it a powerful tool for exploring the way NT works, seeing how applications
use ports, or tracking down problems in system or application configurations.
Portmon works on NT 4.0, Windows 2000 (Win2K), Windows 95 and Windows 98. Note: in order to run on Windows 95 you may require the WinSock2 update, which is available as a free download from Microsoft's web site. |
Portmon 3.x | Version 3.x of Portmon marks the
introduction of a number of powerful features.
The on-line help-file describes all these features, and more, in detail. |
Sample Screen Shot | This is a screenshot of Portmon watching a dial-up session. |
Installation and Use |
Simply execute the Portmon program file (portmon.exe) and Portmon will immediately start capturing debug output. Note that if you run Portmon on Windows NT/2K dbgview.exe must be located on a non-network drive and you must have administrative privilege. Menus, hot-keys, or toolbar buttons can be used to clear the window, save the monitored data to a file, search output, change the window font, and more. The on-line help describes all of Portmon's features. Portmon understands all serial and parallel port I/O control (IOCTLs) commands and will display them along with interesting information regarding their associated parameters. For read and write requests Portmon displays the first several dozen bytes of the buffer, using '.' to represent non-printable characters. The Show Hex menu option lets you toggle between ASCII and raw hex output of buffer data. |
How it Works: WinNT |
The Portmon GUI is
responsible for identifying serial and parallel ports. It does so by
enumerating the serial ports that are configured under
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\Hardware\DeviceMap\SerialComm and the parallel ports defined
under HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\Hardware\DeviceMap\Parallel Ports. These keys contain
the mappings between serial and parallel port device names and the
Win32-accessible names. When you select a port to monitor, Portmon sends a request to its device driver that includes the NT name (e.g. \device\serial0) that you are interested in. The driver uses standard filtering APIs to attach its own filter device object to the target device object. First, it uses ZwCreateFile to open the target device. Then it translates the handle it receives back from ZwCreateFile to a device object pointer. After creating its own filter device object that matches the characteristics of the target, the driver calls IoAttachDeviceByPointer to establish the filter. From that point on the Portmon driver will see all requests aimed at the target device. A complete source code example of filtering is demonstrated by our Filemon file system monitor. Portmon has built-in knowledge of all standard serial and parallel port IOCTLs, which are the primary way that applications and drivers configure and read status information from ports. The IOCTLs are defined in the DDK file \ddk\src\comm\inc\ntddser.h and \ddk\src\comm\inc\ntddpar.h, and some are documented in the DDK. |
How it Works: Win9x | On Windows 95 and 98, the Portmon GUI relies on a dynamically loaded VxD to capture serial and parallel activity. The Windows VCOMM (Virtual Communications) device driver serves as the interface to parallel and serial devices, so applications that access ports indirectly use its services. The Portmon VxD uses standard VxD service hooking to intercept all accesses to VCOMM's functions. Like its NT device driver, Portmon's VxD interprets requests to display them in a friendly format. |
Related Utilities | Here are some other monitoring
tools available at Systems Internals:
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In order to help us
track its use, please download through the link that represents the operating
system on Download Portmon (x86 - 52KB) - you plan on using Portmon on Win9x Download Portmon (x86 - 52KB) - you plan on using Portmon on WinNT |
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