How to Discover Microsoft MQ

The Microsoft Message Queue (MS MQ) discovery process enables you to discover MS MQ topology running with Active Directory, as well as the end configuration of all MS MQ servers.

There are two discovery flows, detailed as follows:

  1. Run the discovery by LDAP

    1. Run the Range IPs by ICMP job, or the Range IPs by nmap job, to discover the MS MQ system IP addresses.

    2. Run the TCP Ports job to discover the LDAP ports on the MS MQ system.

    3. Run the Active Directory Connection by LDAP job to detect which LDAP credentials are needed for discovery for the Microsoft Message Queue Topology by LDAP job.

    4. Run the Microsoft Message Queue Topology by LDAP job to discover the Active Directory topology (forest, site-link).

  2. Run the discovery by NTCMD or UDA

    1. Run the Range IPs by ICMP job, or the Range IPs by nmap job to to discover the MS MQ system IP addresses.

    2. Run the Host Connection by Shell job to detect which Shell credentials are needed for discovery for the Host Applications by Shell job.

    3. Run the Host Applications by Shell job. At this stage, UCMDB contains information about the MS MQ Manager and machine with the domain controller, on condition that the server (the physical machine on which the MS MQ is installed) is a member of the domain.

    4. Run the Microsoft Message Queue Topology by NTCMD or UDA job to discover the server side topology (queues, triggers, rules).

Note Because information is retrieved from configuration files in three short registry branches only, and each file is less than 2 KB, system performance should not be affected.

For details on how DFM discovers MQ topology, see Microsoft MQ Topology Discovery Methodology.

For details on running jobs, refer to "Module/Job-Based Discovery" in the Universal CMDB Data Flow Management section of the UCMDB Online Help.