WUGNET Shareware Pick
Copyright © 1996-1999 Mark Russinovich and Bryce Cogswell
Last Updated March 26, 1999 v4.1
Introduction Filemon is a GUI/device driver combination that monitors and displays all file system activity on a system. It has advanced filtering and search capabilities that make it a powerful tool for exploring the way Windows works, seeing how applications use the files and DLLs, or tracking down problems in system or application configurations. Under Windows NT/2K Filemon can also be used to monitor named pipe activity.

Version 4.0 unifies previous NT and Win9x-specific versions of Filemon into a common interface. Enhancements to the device drivers, and the addition of UI features (always-on-top, listview tool-tips) also mark this major version update.

Filemon works on NT 3.51, 4.0, 5.0 (Win2K), Windows 95 and Windows 98.

Sample Screen Shot This is a screenshot of Filemon watching file system activity

Installation and Use

Simply run the Filemon GUI (filemon.exe) from the same directory that the drivers (filemon.sys and filemon.vxd) reside in. Windows NT: Note that it must be located on a non-network drive and that you must have administrative privilege to run Filemon. When Filemon is started for the first time it will monitor all local hard drives. Menus, hot-keys, or toolbar buttons can be used to clear the window, select and deselect monitored drives (Windows NT), save the monitored data to a file, and to filter and search output.

As events are printed to the output, they are tagged with a sequence number. If Filemon’s internal buffers are overflowed during extremely heavy activity, this will be reflected with gaps in the sequence number.

Filemon allows you to set filters on processes that are logged, as well as paths. Both process and path filters take expressions similar to what the command prompt takes: you can specify names with '*' representing wild cards. The "Path Include" filter represents path names that will be monitored and the "Path Exclude" filter represents path names that will not be monitored. Where there is overlap, Path Exclude overrides. Note that the filters are intrepreted in a case-*in*sensitive manner and that you can specify multiple filter strings by separating them with the ';' character. By default, the filters are set up to watch all file system activity.

For example, if you do not want to see paging file activity you could specify "*pagefile*" as the "Path Exclude" filter. If you only want to see activity to the c:\temp and c:\winnt directories, set "c:\temp*;c:\winnt*" as the Path Include filter. If you set both of these filters and a paging file is in C:\temp, activity to the paging file would not be logged whereas activity to the other files and directories in c:\temp would be.

Filemon can either timestamp events or show their duration. The Events menu and the clock toolbar button let you toggle between the two modes. The button on the toolbar shows the current mode with a clock or a stopwatch. When showing duration the Time field in the output shows the number of seconds it took for the underlying file system to service particular requests.

Each time you exit Filemon it remembers the filters you've configured, position of the window and the widths of the output columns.

Named Pipes and Mail Slots

Starting in version 4.1 Filemon is able to monitor named pipe and mail slot file system activity on Windows NT/2K. Named pipes are commonly used as a communications mechanism in NT/Win2K by core subsystems like the Local Security Authority Subsystem (LSASS), and are used by DCOM. They are also used by network components such as the Browser service. To see named pipe activity with Filemon select Named Pipes in the Drives menu and perform an operation on a shared network resource, or open an application such as Regedt32 that interacts with the security subsystem.

Mail slots are much less commonly used. If you find an application that uses mail slots, please let me know.

How Filemon Works

For the Windows 9x driver, the heart of Filemon is in the virtual device driver, Filevxd.vxd. It is dynamically loaded, and in its initialization it installs a file system filter via the VxD service, IFSMGR_InstallFileSystemApiHook, to insert itself onto the call chain of all file system requests. On Windows NT the heart of Filemon is a file system driver driver that creates and attaches filter device objects to target file system device objects so that Filemon will see all IRPs and FastIO requests directed at drives.

When Filemon sees an open, create or close call, it updates an internal hash table that serves as the mapping between internal file handles and file path names. Whenever it sees calls that are handle based, it looks up the handle in the hash table to obtain the full name for display. If a handle-based access references a file opened before Filemon started, Filemon will fail to find the mapping in it hash table and will simply present the handle's value instead.

Information on accesses is dumped into an ASCII buffer that is periodically copied up to the GUI for it to print in its listbox.

Related Utilities

Here are some other monitoring tools available at Systems Internals:
  • Regmon - a Registry monitor
  • Portmon - a serial and parallel port monitor
  • PMon - a process and thread monitor (NT/Win2K)
  • Diskmon - a hard disk monitor (NT/Win2K)
  • DebugView/EE - a debug output monitor

More Information

The following serve as additional sources of information on the Windows 9x file system:

These are source of information on the Windows NT/2000 file system and/or Filemon:


In order to help us track its use, please download through the link that represents the operating system on
which you will use or mostly use
Filemon.
Note that the zip files are identical, and
Filemon runs on either platform.

Download Filemon (x86- 64KB) - you plan on using Filemon on Win9x

Download Filemon (x86 - 64KB) - you plan on using Filemon on WinNT

Download Filemon (Alpha - 92KB)

Download Filemon Plus Source (313KB)