Old versions required you to know exact product IDs. The new interface uses dropdown menus with human-readable names:
| Option | Description |
|--------|-------------|
| --name <string> | Custom dump name (default: auto_YYYYMMDD_HHMMSS) |
| --output <path> | Directory to save the dump (default: ./dumps/) |
| --include <category> | Comma-separated: cpu,mem,disk,net,proc,logs (default: all) |
| --compress | Create .tar.gz archive after dump |
| --tag <key=value> | Add metadata labels (e.g., --tag build=123 --tag scenario=load) |
| --compare-last | Immediately compare with previous dump (if exists) |
Click the "Generate" or "Search" button. The tool will query Microsoft’s servers. Within 5–10 seconds, you will see a table of results:
Click the "Download" button, or right-click to copy the direct link. Pro tip: Use a download manager to maximize speed and allow resuming.