Event queries are used by temporary event consumers, permanent event consumers, and event providers. Event consumers use event queries to specify events of interest, and event providers use the queries to specify the events that they provide.
Temporary consumers place queries in calls to the
IWbemServices::ExecNotificationQuery or
IWbemServices::ExecNotificationQueryAsync method.
Permanent event consumers place queries in the Query property of an instance of the
__EventFilter system class.
Event providers use event queries to register to support one or more types of events. They place queries in the EventQueryList property of an instance of the
__EventProviderRegistration system class. All event providers create an
__EventProviderRegistration instance to register with Windows Management Instrumentation (WMI). For more information, see
Registering an Event Provider.
Event consumers and providers use the
SELECT statement and a related WHERE clause for event queries, plus a variety of extensions specific to the WMI Query Language (WQL). The extensions are used to protect consumers from being flooded with notifications that occur too frequently to be useful.
Consumers that do not require notification each time an event occurs can specify the following clauses in their queries:
The WITHIN and HAVING clauses affect the timing of events, and the GROUP clause causes a representative event to be sent in place of a frequently occurring event.
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Build date: 8/20/2008