About Configuration Manager Console Nodes

Applies To: System Center Configuration Manager 2007, System Center Configuration Manager 2007 R2, System Center Configuration Manager 2007 R3, System Center Configuration Manager 2007 SP1, System Center Configuration Manager 2007 SP2

Microsoft System Center Configuration Manager 2007 uses XML to define the nodes and their content, that you see in the Configuration Manager 2007 console. New nodes can be added anywhere in the existing node hierarchy.

The XML for a node describes the navigation pane, results pane, and action pane, and the resources that are needed by each pane to display the node.

When writing a new node, consider the following:

  • The position of the node in the hierarchy. Each node is uniquely identified by a GUID. For an example, see How to Create a Configuration Manager Console Node.

  • The node hierarchy. The node structure is hierarchical, and you can nest nodes as deeply as you require. You can also use regular expressions to determine whether a node should be displayed. For an example, see How to Create a Configuration Manager Console Node.

  • Actions. You can define actions that the user selects in the Configuration Manager console. You can use an action to launch forms, run programs, call methods, show reports, and define action menus. For more information, see Configuration Manager Actions.

  • Queries. You can define queries that populate the navigation pane and results pane with SMS Provider objects. You can specify regular expressions to pick the properties that are displayed from the objects queried. For an example, see Configuration Manager Console RootNodes Element.

  • Icons. You can define the icons that are used by nodes. These can be loaded either statically from an assembly or dynamically from a method call. For more information, see Configuration Manager Console Icons.

  • Security. You can secure a node based on security flags that you specify. For an example that sets security for an action, see Configuration Manager Conditional Actions.

  • Views. You can launch views in the Configuration Manager console at desired nodes. For more information about views, see Configuration Manager Console Views.

Note

The Configuration Manager SDK includes a sample XML file and GUID folder for a node that displays the available collections. The GUID folder is the namespace identifier for the tools node

For information about node XML, see Configuration Manager Console Node XML.

See Also

Concepts

Configuration Manager Console Actions
Configuration Manager Console Forms
Configuration Manager Console Icons
Configuration Manager Console Views
How to Create a Configuration Manager Console Node
How to Find a Configuration Manager Console Node GUID
Configuration Manager Console Node XML