In a modern managed environment we deal with highly mobile Windows 10 users. The MDM capabilities in Windows 10 allows enterprises to manage these devices even when distributed all over the globe. This is a great enhancement as we can configure and check compliance of devices every time. But most advantages also introduce some disadvantages and these are the ability to effectively troubleshoot devices like we did in the past. Just walk by and have a look at the event log entries or grab some log files isn’t possible most of the time. Even remote sessions can be challenging, especially when dealing with different time zones. Luckily Microsoft introduced a new capability to cover this scenario with an updated DiagnosticLog CSP ( as per 2019-04-23 docs are not updated to include the latest Version 1.4, 2019-09 docs are updated to version 1.4, DiagnosticLog CSP for triggering devices to upload files to cloud). The new diagnostic capabilities are best described in one sentence:

It is possible to gather on-demand diagnostic log files from Windows 10 via the MDM channel.

Prerequisites

Windows Insider or Windows 10 Version 1903 which includes the DiagnosticLog CSP in Version 1.4.

Procedure

The procedure is very simple and can be broken down into a server part and device part which follows some easy steps. For the server part there are 3 steps:

The IT Pro specifies the data collection definition in form of a XML structure. The types supported here are: event logs, log files, command output, and registry The IT Pro provides a provisioned cloud storage and a shared access signature (SAS) URI for the upload The MDM server (in this case Intune) sends the data collection and upload URI to the device

The device part can also be broken down into 3 steps:

The Device evaluates the data collection XML via DiagnosticLog CSP and drops entries which violates privacy guardrails. Guardrails define allowed paths, commands, extensions, etc. – C:\Users\… is not allowed for example. The Device gathers remaining data collection directives and puts them into a single zip archive labled with hostname and time stamp The device uploads the .zip file to the provided cloud storage SAS URI

Finally we can access the storage account and have our data collection package available for download and troubleshooting:

How can we configure data collection via MDM now?

We start by creating an SAS upload URI for the diagnostic log zip archive. I’ll assume an Azure Blob Storage is already created otherwise look here Create a storage account. If the storage account is in place we can simply generate a new container like diagnosticlogs and then generate a SAS upload URI for it. We restrict it to the necessary permissions which are needed, in this case creation of blobs for a limited time and then copy the Blob service SAS URI (learn more about SAS here ‘Using shared access signatures (SAS)‘):

Blob Storage SAS URI generation

As soon as we have done this we need to put in our newly created container name diagnosticlogs into the ‘Blob service SAS URI’ (copied from the portal – Shared access signature blade) as shown below. The updated URI is needed to make sure our archives are uploaded to our container diagnosticlogs:

https://xxx.blob.core.windows.net/diagnosticlogs?sv=2018-03-28&ss=b&srt=o&sp=c&se=2020-04-23T16:06:10Z&st=2019-04-22T08:06:10Z&spr=https&sig=xxx

On the placeholder xxx you will see your storage account name and your signature of the account. This URI is needed next in the data collection definition xml.

Next we are defining the ‘data collection’ xml structure. This xml represents the actual diagnostics data collection request for the client. In the following example are all available options included event logs, log files, command output, and registry. Feel free to copy and modify it for your needs (inlcude your SasUrl). Important to notice here is the ID, as this is a manually generated GUID which is needed for the DiagnosticLog CSP to keep track of execution. Once the diagnostic data is collected the ID is remembered in the registry (HKLM\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\MdmDiagnostics\{id}). This ensures that the diagnostics data collection runs only once. If you whish to run it again the GUID needs to be changed. This can easily be accomplished by generating a new Guid via PowerShell and the New-Guid command and updating the xml. Following an example data collection xml definition (use your own SAS URI with the replaced xxx placeholders!):

<Collection> <ID>480dd977-3ff0-41d5-a7e9-bdfb837f9769</ID> <SasUrl><![CDATA[https://xxx.blob.core.windows.net/diagnosticlogs?sv=2018-03-28&ss=b&srt=o&sp=wac&se=2020-04-18T23:53:39Z&st=2019-04-17T15:53:39Z&spr=https&sig=xxx]]></SasUrl> <RegistryKey>HKLM\Software\Policies</RegistryKey> <RegistryKey>HKLM\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Clipboard</RegistryKey> <Command>C:\windows\system32\ipconfig.exe /all</Command> <Events>Application</Events> <Events>System</Events> <FoldersFiles>C:\Windows\*.log</FoldersFiles> <FoldersFiles>C:\ProgramData\Microsoft\Network</FoldersFiles> </Collection>

To demonstrate how flexible this approach is, you might want to use constructs like generating a MDM diagnostics report locally to a temp folder and gather the output after generation:

<Command>%windir%\system32\mdmdiagnosticstool.exe -out %ProgramData%\temp\</Command> <FoldersFiles>%ProgramData%\temp\*.*</FoldersFiles>

As a last step we need to define the custom configuration profile in Intune to push this instructions to the device were we want the diagnostics data to be collected from. Following the custom OMA-URI definition:

OMA-URI: ./Vendor/MSFT/DiagnosticLog/DiagnosticArchive/ArchiveDefinition

Data type: String

Value: <data-collection-xml>

This is how it looks like when configured in Intune:

Custom DiagLogs configuration profile

Now you need to wait for the next device check in to deploy the new custom profile to the targeted device:

successful Diag policy deployment

If everything was successful you will see your diagnostic data archive packages in the Azure blob storage container diagnosticlogs:

DiagLogs in Azure blob storage container

Just select one and on the sub menu click on download to get the zip archive. After extraction you will see a folder structure and a results.xml file:

DiagLogs zip archive structure

The data collection xml sequence defines the folder structure. In this example folder 1 maps to Registry HKLM\Software\Policies, folder 2 to the next registry directive and folder 3 to the command directive and so on. The extracted archive folders 1,2,3… may have, according your data collection definition, the following files for troubleshooting then:

RegistryKey – export.reg – a simple registry export of the path specified

Command – output.log – the captured command output

Events – Events.evtx – exported event log entries

FoldersFiles – your captured files from the path specified

The results.xml file tracks the results of the single data collection directives on the attribute HRESULT. In my case everything was okay and the result codes are 0.

If you like to know how to simplify on-demand diagnostic log file gathering during day by day operations by using email notifications and automatic cleanup of the blob storage via a Logic App, then see my follow up post:

On-demand Windows Diagnostic Logs Email Notifications and Cleanup

Conclusion

I think this is very helpful and the way how modern management and troubleshooting must be done. Especially when we have to deal with devices around the globe, in home office situations, or just simply in different timezones. Remember this is available with Windows 10 Version 1903 or newer builds (Insider) and can be utilized with a MDM service like Intune.

As a quick reminder we have similar possibilities to collect Win32 App installation log files in case of an installation error when installing Win32 via Intune Management Extension.

Win32 collect log files

See the official Microsoft documentation for this here:

Win32 app installation troubleshooting

https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/intune/troubleshoot-app-install#win32-app-installation-troubleshooting

In my opinion both features are great new capabilities and addressing challenges in modern management when it comes to troubleshooting. The new DiagnosticLog CSP is a nice new Windows 10 MDM feature and Intune as a MDM service is used in this how-to to utilize the DiagnosticLog CSP. I hope the Intune UI will get this new functionality at some point in time also as it would simplify things a lot. But for now we have a way to utilize the DiagnosticLog CSP and everyone who is familiar with the more technical configurations in Azure and Intune can utilize it already for their 1903+ devices.

Great addition and the right move for modern troubleshooting!