Searching for PowerShell cmdlets with Get-Help
With this recipe, we'll spend a minute using Get-Help inside PowerShell in order to, well, get some help! I see both new and experienced PowerShell administrators going to the web a lot in order to find commands and the parameters of those commands. The internet is great, and there is a ton of data out there about how to use PowerShell, but in many cases, the information that you are looking for resides right inside PowerShell itself. By using the Get-Help
cmdlet combined with the functions you are running or searching for, you might not have to open that web browser after all.
Getting ready
We will be running some commands from inside PowerShell on a Windows Server 2019 machine.
How to do it…
To use the Get-Help
function inside PowerShell, run the following steps:
- Launch a PowerShell prompt.
- Type
Get-Help
. - You may be asked to run
Update-Help
to download the latest help from the internet – you can do this if you wish (although it can sometimes take a while). - You're finished! No, I'm just kidding. Using
Get-Help
by itself will present you with some helpful data about theGet-Help
command, but that's not really what we are looking for, is it? How about usingGet-Help
with a search parameter, like this:Get-Help Computer
The following is the output:
Cool! That searched the available cmdlets and presented us with a list of the ones that contain the word
Computer
. - Now, what if we wanted to find out some more particular information about one of these cmdlets – maybe about
Restart-Computer
, which we used earlier? Use the following command:Get-Help Restart-Computer
The following is the output:
Now we're really cooking! This is wonderful information.
There are many sections of help in the Get-Help
output, and you may not see them all by default. Try running Get-Help Restart-Computer -Full
to see all of them! This is basically what you would find if you were looking for information about the Restart-Computer
cmdlet and went searching on TechNet for it.
How it works…
The Get-Help
cmdlet in PowerShell can be used with virtually any command in order to find out more information about that particular function. I often use it when the specific name of a cmdlet that I want to use escapes my memory. By using Get-Help
as a search function, it will present a list of available cmdlets that include the keyword you specified. This is a brilliant function in PowerShell and is just another example of why PowerShell should replace your usage of the Command Prompt.
Also included with the Get-Help
files are all the special syntax and parameter options for each cmdlet that you might be working with. This saves you having to go to the web in order to search for these functions, and it is just way more fun doing it at the command line than in a web browser.