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Windows Server Automation with PowerShell Cookbook

You're reading from   Windows Server Automation with PowerShell Cookbook Powerful ways to automate and manage Windows administrative tasks

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jul 2021
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781800568457
Length 674 pages
Edition 4th Edition
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Author (1):
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Thomas Lee Thomas Lee
Author Profile Icon Thomas Lee
Thomas Lee
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Table of Contents (18) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Installing and Configuring PowerShell 7 2. Introducing PowerShell 7 FREE CHAPTER 3. Exploring Compatibility with Windows PowerShell 4. Using PowerShell 7 in the Enterprise 5. Exploring .NET 6. Managing Active Directory 7. Managing Networking in the Enterprise 8. Implementing Enterprise Security 9. Managing Storage 10. Managing Shared Data 11. Managing Printing 12. Managing Hyper-V 13. Managing Azure 14. Troubleshooting with PowerShell 15. Managing with Windows Management Instrumentation 16. Other Books You May Enjoy
17. Index

Introduction

Microsoft built Windows PowerShell to work with Microsoft's .NET Framework. You can think of PowerShell as a layer on top of .NET. When you use Get-ChildItem to return file or folder details, the cmdlet invokes a .NET class to do much of the heavy lifting involved. In Chapter 5, Exploring .NET, you learn more about .NET.

As Windows PowerShell evolved, each new version took advantage of improvements in newer versions of .NET to provide additional features.

In 2014, Microsoft announced that they would release the .NET Framework as open source, to be known as .NET Core. Microsoft also decided to freeze development of Windows PowerShell, in favor of open sourcing Windows PowerShell. The first two initial versions were known as PowerShell Core. With the release of PowerShell 7.0, the team dropped the name "Core" and announced that future versions are to be known as just PowerShell. This book refers to the latest version as simply PowerShell 7.

As...

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