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Enterprise PowerShell Scripting Bootcamp

You're reading from   Enterprise PowerShell Scripting Bootcamp The fastest way to learn PowerShell scripting

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Product type Paperback
Published in May 2017
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781787288287
Length 238 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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Brenton J.W. Blawat Brenton J.W. Blawat
Author Profile Icon Brenton J.W. Blawat
Brenton J.W. Blawat
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Toc

Table of Contents (15) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Getting Started with Enterprise PowerShell Scripting FREE CHAPTER 2. Script Structure, Comment Blocks, and Script Logging 3. Working with Answer Files 4. String Encryption and Decryption 5. Interacting with Services, Processes, Profiles, and Logged on Users 6. Evaluating Scheduled Tasks 7. Determining Disk Statistics 8. Windows Features and Installed Software Detection 9. File Scanning 10. Optimizing Script Execution Speed 11. Improving Performance by Using Regular Expressions 12. Overall Script Workflow, Termination Files, and Merging Data Results 13. Creating the Windows Server Scanning Script and Post-Execution Cleanup Index

Summary

In this chapter, you learned how to compose a Windows server scanning script. You started the chapter learning about the structure of the Windows server scanning script. You proceeded to the core scripting components section where you defined the comment block, parameter block, created the answer file reading function, the decryption function, populated the answer files, created the script's logs and logging functions, and created the check-kill function.

You continued creating the script by creating functions for scanning disks, scheduled tasks, processes, Windows services, software, user profiles, Windows features, and directories for files containing strings. You then created a section to query if the scanning script functions were enabled and invoked the functions if they were. You completed the script by commenting the end of the script file and copying the log and CSV files to a UNC path. You learned how to start the Windows server scanning script from the command line...

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