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Windows Server 2012 Automation with PowerShell Cookbook

You're reading from   Windows Server 2012 Automation with PowerShell Cookbook If you work on a daily basis with Windows Server 2012, this book will make life easier by teaching you the skills to automate server tasks with PowerShell scripts, all delivered in recipe form for rapid implementation.

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Product type Paperback
Published in Mar 2013
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781849689465
Length 372 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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EDRICK GOAD EDRICK GOAD
Author Profile Icon EDRICK GOAD
EDRICK GOAD
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Toc

Table of Contents (19) Chapters Close

Windows Server 2012 Automation with PowerShell Cookbook
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
1. Understanding PowerShell Scripting 2. Managing Windows Network Services with PowerShell FREE CHAPTER 3. Managing IIS with PowerShell 4. Managing Hyper-V with PowerShell 5. Managing Storage with PowerShell 6. Managing Network Shares with PowerShell 7. Managing Windows Updates with PowerShell 8. Managing Printers with PowerShell 9. Troubleshooting Servers with PowerShell 10. Managing Performance with PowerShell 11. Inventorying Servers with PowerShell 12. Server Backup Index

Signing PowerShell scripts


When creating PowerShell scripts, modules, and profiles, it is considered best practice to digitally sign them. Signing scripts performs the following two functions:

  • Ensures the script is from a trusted source

  • Ensures the script hasn't been altered since it was signed

Getting ready

To sign a PowerShell script, a code-signing certificate will be needed. Normally these certificates will be provided by your enterprise Private Key Infrastructure (PKI), and the PKI Administrator should be able to help you with the requesting process. Code-signing certificates can also be purchased from third party Certificate Authorities (CA) which can be helpful if your scripts are being distributed outside of your corporate environment.

Once received, the code-signing cert should be added to your Current User | Personal | Certificates certificate store on your computer. Additionally, the root certificate from the Certificate Authority should be added to the Trusted Publishers store for all computers that are going to execute the signed scripts.

How to do it...

Carry out the following steps:

  1. Create and test a PowerShell script.

  2. Sign the script with Set-AuthenticodeSignature.

    $cert = Get-ChildItem Cert:CurrentUser\My\ -CodeSigningCert
    Set-AuthenticodeSignature C:\temp\ServerInfo.ps1 $cert

How it works...

The signing process is fairly simple, but also extremely powerful. The process starts by searching the Current User certificate store for a certificate capable of code signing and is placed into a $cert variable. Set-AuthenticodeSignature is then called to sign the script with the certificate.

If there is more than one code signing certificate on your system, you need to select which certificate to use. To achieve this, update the first line to include a where clause. For example:

$cert = Get-ChildItem Cert:CurrentUser\My\ -CodeSigningCert | Where-Object Subject -eq 'CN=CorpInternal' 

If you open the script in a text editor after it has been signed, you will notice several lines of content appended to the end. These additional lines are the signature that PowerShell will verify before running the script.

Note

Any change to the script (even adding or removing a space) will invalidate the signature. Once the script has been signed, if you need to make changes, you must repeat the signing process.

There's more...

If you don't have an available PKI to obtain a code-signing certificate, or your PKI Administrator is hesitant to give you one, you can create a self-signed certificate for testing purposes. To do this, you can use the following PowerShell script which is based on the script by Vishal Agarwal at http://blogs.technet.com/b/vishalagarwal/archive/2009/08/22/generating-a-certificate-self-signed-using-powershell-and-certenroll-interfaces.aspx:

$name = new-object -com "X509Enrollment.CX500DistinguishedName.1"
$name.Encode("CN=TestCode", 0)

$key = new-object -com "X509Enrollment.CX509PrivateKey.1"
$key.ProviderName = "Microsoft RSA SChannel Cryptographic Provider"
$key.KeySpec = 1
$key.Length = 1024
$key.SecurityDescriptor = "D:PAI(A;;0xd01f01ff;;;SY)(A;;0xd01f01ff;;;BA)(A;;0x80120089;;;NS)"
$key.MachineContext = 1
$key.Create()

$serverauthoid = new-object -com "X509Enrollment.CObjectId.1"
$serverauthoid.InitializeFromValue("1.3.6.1.5.5.7.3.3") # Code Signing
$ekuoids = new-object -com "X509Enrollment.CObjectIds.1"
$ekuoids.add($serverauthoid)
$ekuext = new-object -com "X509Enrollment.CX509ExtensionEnhancedKeyUsage.1"
$ekuext.InitializeEncode($ekuoids)

$cert = new-object -com "X509Enrollment.CX509CertificateRequestCertificate.1"
$cert.InitializeFromPrivateKey(2, $key, "")
$cert.Subject = $name
$cert.Issuer = $cert.Subject
$cert.NotBefore = get-date
$cert.NotAfter = $cert.NotBefore.AddDays(90)
$cert.X509Extensions.Add($ekuext)
$cert.Encode()

$enrollment = new-object -com "X509Enrollment.CX509Enrollment.1"
$enrollment.InitializeFromRequest($cert)
$certdata = $enrollment.CreateRequest(0)
$enrollment.InstallResponse(2, $certdata, 0, "")

Executing this script will create the certificate and install it on the local computer as shown in the following screenshot:

Note

The self-signed certificate still needs to be added to your Trusted Root Certification Authorities and Trusted Publishers store for the certificate to be considered valid by client computers.

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