Consider the following WSH snippet:
var query = GetObject(\"winmgmts:\").ExecQuery(\"SELECT Name FROM Win32_Printer\", \"WQL\", 0); var e = new Enumerator(query); for
I think the problem is in your query you're only asking for the Name. Try asking for both Name and status:
var query = GetObject("winmgmts:").ExecQuery("SELECT Name, Status FROM Win32_Printer", "WQL", 0);
var e = new Enumerator(query);
for ( ; !e.atEnd(); e.moveNext ()) {
var p = e.item();
WScript.Echo(p.Name + " (" + p.Status + ")" );
}
I got some more properties from http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/aa394363(VS.85).aspx and several work. I queried for DriverName and Comment and both had text or at least a null.
var query = GetObject("winmgmts:").ExecQuery("SELECT Name, Status, DriverName, Comment FROM Win32_Printer", "WQL", 0);
var e = new Enumerator(query);
for ( ; !e.atEnd(); e.moveNext ()) {
var p = e.item();
WScript.Echo(p.Name + " (" + p.Status + ") " + p.DriverName + " " + p.Comment);
}
JScript's for...in
statement isn't compatible with WMI objects, because, well, they are more complex than native JScript objects. WMI objects expose their property collection via the special Properties_ property, so to list all available properties of an object, you need to enumerate this collection like you enumerate the query results to access individual WMI objects. Each object property is represented by a SWbemProperty object that has the Name
, Value
and other properties providing info about the appropriate object property.
This example should help you get the idea:
var query = GetObject("winmgmts:").ExecQuery("SELECT Name, Status FROM Win32_Printer");
var colPrinters = new Enumerator(query);
var oPrinter, colProps, p;
// Enumerate WMI objects
for ( ; !colPrinters.atEnd(); colPrinters.moveNext()) {
oPrinter = colPrinters.item();
// Enumerate WMI object properties
colProps = new Enumerator(oPrinter.Properties_);
for ( ; !colProps.atEnd(); colProps.moveNext()) {
p = colProps.item();
WScript.Echo(p.Name + ": " + p.Value);
}
}
Note that this script will also display the DeviceID
property value, because it's a key property of the Win32_Printer
class, so it's also retrieved in order to uniquely identify class instances.
If you'd like to avoid the need to use an explicit Enumerator every time you need to iterate over a collection object that needs one, you can define a little helper function like this:
function forEach(collection, func) {
for (var e = new Enumerator(collection); !e.atEnd(); e.moveNext()) {
func(e.item());
}
}
Iteration over collections then becomes rather less clumsy:
var queryResult = GetObject("winmgmts:").ExecQuery("SELECT Name, Status FROM Win32_Printer");
// Enumerate WMI objects
forEach (queryResult, function (oPrinter) {
// Enumerate WMI object properties
forEach (oPrinter.Properties_, function (p) {
WScript.Echo(p.Name + ": " + p.Value);
});
});