Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byHelen Carroll Modified over 9 years ago
1
POWERSHELL BASICS
2
BACKGROUND Powershell is a task automation and scripting language based off the.NET framework It provides the user full access to the COM (Component Object Model) and WMI (Windows Management Instrumentation) The functions (lightweight commands) that PowerShell utilizes to complete certain tasks are called cmdlets (command-lets)
3
BACKGROUND (CONTINUED) Cmdlets are not standalone executables; they are instances of.NET framework classes PowerShell syntax is case insensitive
4
FIRST SCRIPT Suppose you wanted to query a list of currently running processes on a system. The following command will do just that: Get-Process To sort the list of processes, use the pipeline ` | ` to pass the output to the Sort-Object cmdlet (or Sort) You can select certain fields of the output by piping the output and passing it using select
5
FIRST SCRIPT (RUNNING THE SCRIPT) There are various ways a PowerShell script can be run Command line Type in the path of the script If the current directory is the same as the script, the filename must be preceded with “.\” or “./” File Explorer
6
FIRST SCRIPT (RUNNING THE SCRIPT) Based on the ExecutionPolicy setting on the system, this may need to be overridden in order to be able to run scripts To change this setting, you must be an administrator You can bypass this setting without actually changing the setting by writing a one-line batch file that calls PowerShell to run the script using certain arguments
7
ACTIVE DIRECTORY PowerShell, being native to the Windows environment, is a powerful language to use when interacting with AD objects The user can process information more quickly than some GUI utilities
8
ACTIVE DIRECTORY (EXAMPLES) Query all AD users in the domain: Get-ADUser –Filter * Get AD users based on a filter: Get-ADUser -Filter 'name -like "parsa*“’ Notice the wildcard at the end of the filter Filter users based on department: Get-ADUser –Filter ‘office –like “* *”’
9
ACTIVE DIRECTORY (EXAMPLES, CONTINUED) You can query AD computer objects that have been created or modified by a certain date $d = (Get-Date).addDays(-1) Variable $d is assigned the value of one day before the current date
10
UPDATING COMPUTER SCRIPT ./updateWorkstation.bat ./updateWorkstation.ps1
11
GET AD COMPUTERS WHEN CREATED SCRIPT ./getComputerModBy.bat ./getComputerModBy.ps1
12
BACKUP USERS SCRIPT ./backup.bat ./backup.ps1
13
GET COMPUTER NAME AND RAM SCRIPT ./getComputerName.bat ./getComputerName.ps1
14
SOURCES http://windowsitpro.com/powershell/top-10-active-directory- tasks-solved-powershell http://windowsitpro.com/powershell/top-10-active-directory- tasks-solved-powershell https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms714395(v=vs.85).aspx
Similar presentations
© 2024 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.