Processor Information \% Interrupt Time Windows Server 2016 and above

Microsoft.Windows.Server.10.0.Processor.PercentInterruptTime.Collection (Rule)

Collects the performance counter Processor Information\\% Interrupt Time

Knowledge Base article:

Summary

This rule collects performance data for the Processor Information\% Interrupt Time performance counter.

The Processor Information\% Interrupt Time performance counter exposes the time the processor spends receiving and servicing hardware interrupts during sample intervals. This value is an indirect indicator of the activity of devices that generate interrupts, such as the system clock, the mouse, disk drivers, data communication lines, network interface cards and other peripheral devices. These devices normally interrupt the processor when they have completed a task or require attention. Normal thread execution is suspended during interrupts. Most system clocks interrupt the processor every 10 milliseconds, creating a background of interrupt activity. suspends normal thread execution during interrupts. This counter displays the average busy time as a percentage of the sample time.

Element properties:

TargetMicrosoft.Windows.Server.10.0.Processor
CategoryPerformanceCollection
EnabledFalse
Alert GenerateFalse
RemotableTrue

Member Modules:

ID Module Type TypeId RunAs 
PerformanceDS DataSource Microsoft.Windows.Server.10.0.Processor.Performance.ModuleType Default
WriteToDB WriteAction Microsoft.SystemCenter.CollectPerformanceData Default
WriteToDW WriteAction Microsoft.SystemCenter.DataWarehouse.PublishPerformanceData Default

Source Code:

<Rule ID="Microsoft.Windows.Server.10.0.Processor.PercentInterruptTime.Collection" Enabled="false" Target="ServervNext!Microsoft.Windows.Server.10.0.Processor">
<Category>PerformanceCollection</Category>
<DataSources>
<DataSource ID="PerformanceDS" TypeID="Microsoft.Windows.Server.10.0.Processor.Performance.ModuleType">
<CounterName>% Interrupt Time</CounterName>
<ObjectName>Processor</ObjectName>
<InstanceName>$Target/Property[Type="WindowsServer!Microsoft.Windows.Server.Processor"]/PerfmonInstance$</InstanceName>
<Frequency>300</Frequency>
<TimeoutSeconds>300</TimeoutSeconds>
</DataSource>
</DataSources>
<WriteActions>
<WriteAction ID="WriteToDB" TypeID="SC!Microsoft.SystemCenter.CollectPerformanceData"/>
<WriteAction ID="WriteToDW" TypeID="SCDW!Microsoft.SystemCenter.DataWarehouse.PublishPerformanceData"/>
</WriteActions>
</Rule>