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Active Directory with PowerShell

You're reading from   Active Directory with PowerShell Learn to configure and manage Active Directory using PowerShell in an efficient and smart way

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jan 2015
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781782175995
Length 230 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Concepts
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Authors (2):
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YELLAPRAGADA U PADMAVATHI YELLAPRAGADA U PADMAVATHI
Author Profile Icon YELLAPRAGADA U PADMAVATHI
YELLAPRAGADA U PADMAVATHI
Pamarthi Venkata Sitaram Pamarthi Venkata Sitaram
Author Profile Icon Pamarthi Venkata Sitaram
Pamarthi Venkata Sitaram
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Toc

Table of Contents (11) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Let's Get Started 2. Managing User and Computer Objects FREE CHAPTER 3. Working with Active Directory Groups and Memberships 4. Configuring Group Policies 5. Managing Domains, Organizational Units, Sites, and Subnets 6. Advanced AD Operations Using PowerShell 7. Managing DFS-N and DFS-R Using PowerShell 8. Managing Active Directory DNS Using PowerShell 9. Miscellaneous Scripts and Resources for Further Learning Index

Searching and modifying group object information

Searching Active Directory for the presence of a group is similar to searching users and groups. A cmdlet called Get-ADGroup from the Active Directory module can be used to get group object information.

For example, we can use the following command to get display names of all groups in Active Directory:

Get-ADGroup -Filter * | select Name

By specifying asterisk (*) as an argument to the -Filter parameter, we are querying all groups in Active Directory and then displaying the value of the Name property using the select statement.

To search for a specific group by name, we can pass the name of the group to the -Filter parameter, as shown in the following command:

Get-ADGroup -Filter "Name -eq 'Test Group1'"

This command searches Active Directory for groups with the name that exactly matches Test Group1 and returns the group object if present; otherwise, no output is seen.

There is another parameter that helps in performing the...

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