WebProcessInformation Class
Provides information about the worker process that hosts ASP.NET.
Assembly: System.Web (in System.Web.dll)
The WebProcessInformation type exposes the following members.
| Name | Description | |
|---|---|---|
![]() | AccountName | Gets the account name for the worker process. |
![]() | ProcessID | Gets the process identifier. |
![]() | ProcessName | Gets the name of the process. |
| Name | Description | |
|---|---|---|
![]() | Equals(Object) | Determines whether the specified Object is equal to the current Object. (Inherited from Object.) |
![]() | Finalize | Allows an object to try to free resources and perform other cleanup operations before it is reclaimed by garbage collection. (Inherited from Object.) |
![]() | FormatToString | Formats the application information. |
![]() | GetHashCode | Serves as a hash function for a particular type. (Inherited from Object.) |
![]() | GetType | Gets the Type of the current instance. (Inherited from Object.) |
![]() | MemberwiseClone | Creates a shallow copy of the current Object. (Inherited from Object.) |
![]() | ToString | Returns a string that represents the current object. (Inherited from Object.) |
ASP.NET health monitoring allows production and operations staff to manage deployed Web applications. The System.Web.Management namespace contains the health-event types responsible for packaging application health-status data, and the provider types responsible for processing this data. It also contains supporting types that help during the management of health events.
Instances of the WebProcessInformation class contain information that is obtained using any of the types derived from the WebManagementEvent type.
Your application needs the appropriate permissions to access protected information provided by this type.
The following example is an excerpt of the configuration file you could use to enable ASP.NET to log error events that contain process information.
<healthMonitoring
enabled="true" heartBeatInterval="0">
<rules>
<add
name="All Errors Default"
eventName="All Errors"
provider="EventLogProvider"
profile="Default"
minInterval="00:01:00" />
</rules>
</healthMonitoring>
Note |
|---|
In most cases you will be able to use the ASP.NET health-monitoring types as implemented, and you will control the health-monitoring system by specifying values in the healthMonitoring configuration section. You can also derive from the health-monitoring types to create your own custom events and providers. For an example of creating a custom event class, see the Example section. |
The following example has two parts. The first is an excerpt of a configuration file that enables ASP.NET to use a custom event that uses the WebProcessInformation type.
The second shows how to implement the custom event.
Ensure that your custom event is raised at the proper time, that is, when the equivalent system health event it replaces would be raised.
<healthMonitoring
enabled="true" heartBeatInterval="0">
<eventMappings>
<add
name="SampleProcessInformation"
type="SamplesAspNet.SampleWebProcessInformation, webprocessinformation, Version=1.0.1585.27289, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=3648e5c763a8239f, processorArchitecture=MSIL"/>
</eventMappings>
<rules>
<add
name="Custom Process Information"
eventName="SampleProcessInformation"
provider="EventLogProvider"
profile="Default"/>
</rules>
</healthMonitoring>
The following example shows how to implement a custom event that uses the WebProcessInformation type.
Windows 7, Windows Vista SP1 or later, Windows XP SP3, Windows XP SP2 x64 Edition, Windows Server 2008 (Server Core not supported), Windows Server 2008 R2 (Server Core supported with SP1 or later), Windows Server 2003 SP2
The .NET Framework does not support all versions of every platform. For a list of the supported versions, see .NET Framework System Requirements.



Note