I've been working with WMI for the purposes of building a system fingerprint and it... works... but only just. It takes forever, and the worst part is that it's at application startup, so minutes pass before anything else happens.
Herein is how I am building the system finger print:
private static async Task<string> GetHash( string s ) {
byte[ ] b = await Task.Run( ( ) => IdLib.AscEnc.GetBytes( s ) );
return await IdLib.GetHexString( IdLib.CSP.ComputeHash( b ) );
}
private static async Task<string> GetHexString( byte[ ] b ) {
string s = string.Empty;
await Task.Run( ( ) => {
b.ToList( ).ForEach( by => {
int[ ] n = new int[ ] { 0, 0, 0 };
n[0] = ( int )by;
n[1] = n[0] & 15;
n[2] = ( n[0] >> 4 ) & 15;
s += n[1] > 9
? ( ( char )( n[1] - 10 + ( int )'A' ) ).ToString( )
: n[1].ToString( );
s += n[2] > 9
? ( ( char )( n[2] - 10 + ( int )'A' ) ).ToString( )
: n[2].ToString( );
if ( ( s.Length - s.Count( c => c == '-' ) ) % 4 == 0 )
s += '-';
} );
} );
return s.TrimEnd( '-' );
}
private static async Task<string> ID( string wmiClass, string wmiProperty, string wmiMustBeTrue ) {
string result = string.Empty;
List<ManagementObject> MOC = new ManagementClass( wmiClass ).GetInstances( ).Cast<ManagementObject>( ).ToList( );
foreach ( ManagementObject MO in MOC ) {
if ( wmiMustBeTrue.Equals( string.Empty ) || MO[wmiMustBeTrue].ToString( ).Equals( "True" ) )
if ( result.Equals( string.Empty ) )
try {
result = await Task.Run( ( ) => MO[wmiProperty].ToString( ) );
break;
} catch { }
}
return result;
}
private static async Task<string> ID( string wmiClass, string wmiProperty ) {
return await IdLib.ID( wmiClass, wmiProperty, string.Empty );
}
private static async Task<string> GetCPUID( ) {
string r = await IdLib.ID( "Win32_Processor", "UniqueId" );
if ( r.Equals( string.Empty ) )
r = await IdLib.ID( "Win32_Processor", "ProcessorId" );
if ( r.Equals( string.Empty ) )
r = await IdLib.ID( "Win32_Processor", "Name" );
if ( r.Equals( string.Empty ) )
r = await IdLib.ID( "Win32_Processor", "Manufacturer" );
r += IdLib.ID( "Win32_Processor", "MaxClockSpeed" );
return await IdLib.GetHash( r );
}
private static async Task<string> GetBiosID( ) {
return await IdLib.GetHash(
await IdLib.ID( "Win32_BIOS", "Manufacturer" ) +
await IdLib.ID( "Win32_BIOS", "SMBIOSBIOSVersion" ) +
await IdLib.ID( "Win32_BIOS", "IdentificationCode" ) +
await IdLib.ID( "Win32_BIOS", "SerialNumber" ) +
await IdLib.ID( "Win32_BIOS", "ReleaseDate" ) +
await IdLib.ID( "Win32_BIOS", "Version" )
);
}
private static async Task<string> GetHDDID( ) {
return await IdLib.GetHash(
await IdLib.ID( "Win32_DiskDrive", "Model" ) +
await IdLib.ID( "Win32_DiskDrive", "Manufacturer" ) +
await IdLib.ID( "Win32_DiskDrive", "Signature" ) +
await IdLib.ID( "Win32_DiskDrive", "TotalHeads" ) );
}
private static async Task<string> GetMOBOID( ) {
return await IdLib.GetHash(
await IdLib.ID( "Win32_BaseBoard", "Model" ) +
await IdLib.ID( "Win32_BaseBoard", "Manufacturer" ) +
await IdLib.ID( "Win32_BaseBoard", "Name" ) +
await IdLib.ID( "Win32_BaseBoard", "SerialNumber" ) );
}
private static async Task<string> GetVGAID( ) {
return await IdLib.GetHash(
await IdLib.ID( "Win32_VideoController", "DriverVersion" ) +
await IdLib.ID( "Win32_VideoController", "Name" ) );
}
private static async Task<string> GetMACID( ) {
return await IdLib.GetHash( await IdLib.ID( "Win32_NetworkAdapterConfiguration", "MacAddress", "IPEnabled" ) );
}
Acknowledging that there is probably a lot wrong here, my first and foremost concern is that the ID(string, string, string)
method is taking forever to execute, and that's just not acceptable. Does there exist an alternative to using WMI for obtaining such low level information? If necessary, I'm willing to go as far as constructing a C/C++ library to speed this up...
EDIT 1
It has been suggested that the bulk of the time being consumed happens when creating a ManagementClass
object. Instead of that I have opted for going with something a WqlObjectQuery
:
private static async Task<string> ID( string wmiClass, string wmiProperty, string wmiMustBeTrue ) {
Task<string> T = Task.Run( ( ) => {
Stopwatch SW = new Stopwatch( );
WqlObjectQuery Q = new WqlObjectQuery(
"SELECT " +
wmiProperty +
" FROM "
+ wmiClass +
( string.IsNullOrEmpty( wmiMustBeTrue ) ? "" : "WHERE " + wmiMustBeTrue + " = True" ) );
ManagementObjectSearcher MOS = new ManagementObjectSearcher( Q );
SW.Start( );
ManagementObjectCollection MOC = MOS.Get( );
while ( MOC.GetEnumerator( ).MoveNext( ) )
if ( !string.IsNullOrEmpty( MOC.GetEnumerator( ).Current[wmiProperty].ToString( ) ) ) {
SW.Stop( );
Console.WriteLine( "Querying " + wmiProperty + " of " + wmiClass + " took " + SW.Elapsed.ToString( ) );
return MOC.GetEnumerator( ).Current[wmiProperty].ToString( );
}
return null;
});
await T;
if ( T.Exception == null )
return T.Result;
else {
Console.WriteLine( "Exception in ID Method Function : wmiClass : " + wmiClass + "; wmiPriperty : " + wmiProperty + ";" );
Exception E = T.Exception;
while ( E != null ) {
Console.WriteLine( E.Message );
Console.WriteLine( E.StackTrace );
E = E.InnerException;
}
return null;
}
}
I've been noticing, while watching the debug output, that there continues to be these first chance exceptions thrown, telling me that there is a NullReferenceException... somewhere... it's quite irritating. I enabled breaking on every exception type and it's led me to the conclusion that it's been getting thrown when I was trying to do the following :
return new ManagementObjectSearcher(/*Direct String Query*/).Get( ).Cast<ManagementObject>( ).First( )[wmiProperty].ToString( );
This made me think that I was probably doing too much, so I switched it to the present incarnation of the function which is now throwing another exception (first chance, I think), telling me that the MOC.GetEnumerator( ).Current[wmiProperty].ToString( )
is throwing an exception because something is in an invalid state. I think it's because I need to get the enumerator into it's own variable maybe... but that makes no sense either because it's passed by reference, so having a variable of ManagementObjectEnumerator Foo = MOC.GetEnumerator
should be exactly the same (although for brevity less ideal) than just calling MOC.GetEnumerator( )
... It may also be that the object within the property I am querying is null and trying to make it into a string is breaking things... more to come I'm sure...
EDIT 2
Okay, so it was because I wasn't instantiating the enumerator. Third incarnation of the function:
private static async Task<string> ID( string wmiClass, string wmiProperty, string wmiMustBeTrue ) {
Task<string> T = Task.Run( ( ) => {
Stopwatch SW = new Stopwatch( );
SW.Start( );
ManagementObjectCollection.ManagementObjectEnumerator MOE = new ManagementObjectSearcher(
"SELECT " +
wmiProperty +
" FROM "
+ wmiClass +
( string.IsNullOrEmpty( wmiMustBeTrue ) ? "" : "WHERE " + wmiMustBeTrue + " = True" ) ).Get( ).GetEnumerator( );
while ( MOE.MoveNext( ) )
if ( MOE.Current[wmiProperty] != null && !string.IsNullOrEmpty( MOE.Current[wmiProperty].ToString( ) ) ) {
SW.Stop( );
Console.WriteLine( "Querying " + wmiProperty + " of " + wmiClass + " took " + SW.Elapsed.ToString( ) );
return MOE.Current[wmiProperty].ToString( );
}
SW.Stop( );
Console.WriteLine( "Querying " + wmiProperty + " of " + wmiClass + " took " + SW.Elapsed.ToString( ) + "; returned null." );
return null;
});
await T;
if ( T.Exception == null )
return T.Result;
else {
Console.WriteLine( "Exception in ID Method Function : wmiClass : " + wmiClass + "; wmiPriperty : " + wmiProperty + ";" );
Exception E = T.Exception;
while ( E != null ) {
Console.WriteLine( E.Message );
Console.WriteLine( E.StackTrace );
E = E.InnerException;
}
return null;
}
}
I suppose that's reasonable and makes sense as the function GetEnumerator( ) may return an instance rather than a reference...
C
.ManagementClass( wmiClass ).GetInstances
to get the properties because you are getting all the properties of the WMI class, instead build the WQL sentence on the fly. that will improve the performance.