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Category: WMI

Friday Fun: Create a PowerShell Trace Window

Posted on November 1, 2013November 20, 2015

Way back in the day, it was all VBScript and HTAs for me. I built a number of HTA tools for other people to use. As you might expect they didn’t always work and troubleshooting something I couldn’t see was difficult. So I came up with a solution to use an Internet Explorer window as…

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Friday Fun: 50 Shades of PowerShell HTML Reports

Posted on October 25, 2013

I’ve been working on a project for a client that includes creating an HTML report, generated by PowerShell. I originally thought I would include a certain feature but decided against it. However, this is so cool I thought I’d share it with you as a Friday Fun article. I’ve done alot this year with some…

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Runspaces, Remoting and Workflow, Oh My!

Posted on October 18, 2013October 18, 2013

The other day on Twitter I saw a message about new script in the Microsoft Script Center on getting remote event logs with WMI. So I took a look at the script. If you take a minute to look at the script you’ll quickly realize this is not a script for beginners. My initial thought…

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Resolving SIDs with WMI, WSMAN and PowerShell

Posted on October 15, 2013

In the world of Windows, an account SID can be a very enigmatic thing. Who is S-1-5-21-2250542124-3280448597-2353175939-1019? Fortunately, many applications, such as the event log viewer resolve the SID to an account name. The downside, is that when you are accessing that same type of information from PowerShell, you end up with the “raw’ SID….

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Adding System Path to CIMInstance Objects

Posted on June 13, 2013

The other night when I presented for the Mississippi PowerShell Users’ Group, one of the members showed some PowerShell 3.0 code using the CIM cmdlets. At issue is how the CIM cmdlets handle the WMI system properties like __SERVER and __RELPATH. By default, those properties aren’t displayed, but they are captured in the CimSystemProperties property….

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Browse TrainSignal Courses with PowerShell

Posted on June 5, 2013June 5, 2013

It took longer than I expected, but my latest course for TrainSignal is now available. PowerShell v3 Essentials is targeted for IT Pros with little to no PowerShell experience. This is the course that will get you up and running in short order. I developed the course so that an IT Pro could be effective…

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Test 64-Bit Operating System

Posted on May 16, 2013

One of the great features of PowerShell is how much you can get from a relatively simple one line command. For example. you might want to test if a computer is running a 64-bit operating system. You can find out with a command as simple as this. PS C:\> (get-wmiobject win32_operatingsystem -comp chi-dc01).OsArchitecture -match “64”…

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TechDays SF Presentations

Posted on May 6, 2013

Last week I presented a number of sessions at TechDays in beautiful San Francisco. Met some great people and had a great time. I presented 4 talks, almost all of them PowerShell-related. Actually, they all had some type of PowerShell content. I’m happy to share my session slides and PowerShell demonstrations. Most of the demonstrations…

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Get CIMInstance from PowerShell 2.0

Posted on April 10, 2013May 6, 2014

I love the new CIM cmdlets in PowerShell 3.0. Querying WMI is a little faster because the CIM cmdlets query WMI using the WSMAN protocol instead of DCOM. The catch is that remote computers must be running PowerShell 3 which includes the latest version of the WSMAN protocol and the WinRM service. But if your…

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WMI Explorer from The PowerShell Guy

Posted on March 8, 2013March 12, 2013

Several years ago, The PowerShell Guy, aka MoW, wrote a fantastic graphical PowerShell script that was a WMI Explorer. With this script you could connect to a computer and namespace, browse classes and view instances. A great way for discovering things about WMI. However Marc has moved on to other things I think and his…

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PowerShell Morning Report with Credentials

Posted on February 22, 2013

I had an email about trying to use my Morning Report script to connect to machines that required alternate credentials. For example, you might have non-domain systems in a DMZ. Fair enough. Since most of the report script uses WMI, it wasn’t too hard to add a Credential parameter and modify the WMI code to…

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Find Files with PowerShell 3.0

Posted on February 7, 2013February 21, 2014

My last few articles have looked at using WMI and CIM_DATAFILE class to find files, primarily using Get-WmiObject in PowerShell. But now that we have PowerShell 3.0 at our disposal, we can use the new CIM cmdlets. So I took my most recent version of Get-CIMFile and revised it specifically to use Get-CimInstance. I also…

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Find Files with WMI and PowerShell Revisited

Posted on February 4, 2013

Last week I posted a PowerShell function to find files using WMI. One of the comments I got was about finding files with wildcards. In WMI, we’ve been able to search via wildcards and the LIKE operator since the days of XP. In a WMI query we use the % as the wildcard character. Here’s…

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Building Excel Reports with PowerShell

Posted on January 30, 2013

Last year I wrote a series of articles for the Petri IT KnowledgeBase on using Microsoft Excel with PowerShell. Today I received an email from a reader who had a question about article that showed how to build a drive usage report in Excel. In the article I suggest it wouldn’t be too difficult to…

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Find Files with WMI and PowerShell

Posted on January 29, 2013

Finding files is one of those necessary evils for IT Pros. Sometimes we’re searching for a needle in a haystack. And it gets even more complicated when the haystacks are on 10 or 100 or 1000 remote computers. You might think using Get-ChildItem is your only option. Certainly it works, but if you are searching…

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