I have problem when trying to use Powershell when remoting seesion:
$PSSessionConfigurationName = 'Powershell.7.'
Enter-PSSession -ComputerName MyHostname
When i try these command this error appears :
C:\Windows\system32\Powershell\7.2.1\pwrshplugin.dll is not loaded. (with some stuff)
But this file really exists, os win server 2012 r2
Help please
Related
I am facing a difficulty on installing RSAT to remote windows 10 workstations via gpo. My main goal is to use Get-ADuser command as a necessity to gain information from my Windows domain.
I created a PowerShell script using the following command:
Get-WindowsCapability -Name RSAT* -Online | Add-WindowsCapability –Online
Yet when I run it, a message appears asking for elevated privileges.
So I tried to add credentials in order to automate the installation and changed the script to :
$Username = 'domain\domain_adm'
$Password = '*******'
$pass = ConvertTo-SecureString -AsPlainText $Password -Force
$Cred = New-Object System.Management.Automation.PSCredential -ArgumentList $Username,$pass
Start-Process -FilePath powershell.exe -ArgumentList{Get-WindowsCapability -Name RSAT* -Online | Add-WindowsCapability –Online} -credential $Cred
And from a normal PowerShell window, it works. But, it doesn't when I am trying to use it from gpo.
Could you please assist me?
The goal is to install via GPO Get-ADuser (maybe RSAT) to domain workstations with OS Windows 10
For a small number of machines Powershell is not a bad option. If you have access to GPOs then you should use then. RSAT is "Windows feature". You can use WSUS. https://4sysops.com/archives/install-rsat-1809-and-other-optional-features-in-wsus-environments/ You could also use the software that you use to install software on the machine on the network . Many of software distribution packages run as root when it installs software. In this case just give that team the line below.
Get-WindowsCapability -Name RSAT* -Online | Add-WindowsCapability –Online
Why are you putting credentials in clear text in a script file? That
is just bad practice and should not be done.
Installing software is an Admin level thing, local, GPO, or
otherwise, because it's a system-wide change.
Lastly, this is not a PowerShell code/programming issue and not something PowerShell can fix relative to how you are trying to do this. It's specifically how do I use GPO to enable a Windows feature or install software, using PowerShell?
So, could be considered off-topic for Stackoverflow and more a question for SuperUser or StackExchange.
All that being said, you can still use PowerShell to do this, but doing so by using PowerShell to set a scheduled task to the targets and set that to the admin creds at run once at login.
You can write a separate script to create the scheduled task.
You can use the below script for the RSAT install effort via the task.
Use PowerShell to Create Scheduled Tasks
New-ScheduledTask
Very similar to this approach with updating PowerShell help:
PowerShell: Update-Help via Scheduled Task in Group Policy Preferences
As far as what js2010 has stated. That was true for earlier versions of Windows 10. The current state of things is as noted below.
Install RSAT for Windows 10 1809 and 1903 and 1909 automated
RSAT (Remote Server Administration Tools) in Windows 10 v1809 and
v1903 are no longer a downloadable add-on to Windows. Instead, its
included as a set of "Features on Demand" directly in Windows.
Download: Install-RSATv1809v1903v1909.ps1
Long term Scheduled Task management can be accomplished via GPO as well, as noted here:
Managing Scheduled Tasks from Group Policy
You can download RSAT as an msu file: https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/download/details.aspx?id=45520
EDIT: Ok, as for 1809 and above, my first thoughts are a gpo startup script, or using invoke-command.
I have this script:
Invoke-WUJob -ComputerName comp-1,comp-2,comp-3 -Script {ipmo PSWindowsUpdate; Get-WUInstall -Install -AcceptAll | Out-File C:\PSWindowsUpdate.log } -Confirm:$false -Verbose –RunNow
and after execution I get this:
Invoke-WUJob : PSWindowsUpdate module missing on destination machine
At line:1 char:1
+ Invoke-WUJob -ComputerName 1002-hk-ws-001,1002-hk-ws-002,1002-hk-ws-0 ...
+ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+ CategoryInfo : ResourceUnavailable: (:) [Invoke-WUJob], Exception
+ FullyQualifiedErrorId : ModuleMissing,PSWindowsUpdate.InvokeWUJob
I used these commands below on every PC to install to PSWindowsUpdate and setup winrm and it still does not work:
winrm quickconfig -q
winrm set winrm/config/client ‘#{TrustedHosts="comp1,comp2,comp3"}’
Set-ExecutionPolicy RemoteSigned
Install-Module PSWindowsUpdate -Scope CurrentUser -Force
Any ideas?
the windows update cannot use remotely, maybe the hardening, you could work with a schedule task Register-ScheduledJob -scriptblock { get-windowsupdate -acceptall}
I am going to assume that you are in a workgroup mode, vs Domain joined machines by virtue of what you said you did on each host.
You have to be an admin on the target to run this.
about_Remote_Requirements
Unless you make additional configs.
You Don’t Have to Be An Administrator to Run Remote PowerShell Commands
Thus, you need to pass credentials in your code, if you are not already running your PowerShell session with admin creds for the remote targets. This is really PowerShell remoting 101 and a well-documented use case.
Your error is saying the module is not on the remote host or can't be found.
Windows updates are a machine-level thing. So, the import should be to the AllUsers PowerShell profile not some individual user of the machines. There is extra work to get PSRemoting working on workgroup systems. For domain-joined, hosts, you can enable it using GPO. No need for extra steps.
See the steps here:
Enable PowerShell Remoting on a standalone (workgroup) computer
Running code on remote systems will always run in the user context that you started, regardless of who is on the remote target.
Ok so now I'am getting a different error :
Invoke-WUJob : You can not find requested file . (Error HRESULT: 0x80070002)
At line:1 char:1
+ Invoke-WUJob -ComputerName 1002-ski-ws-003,1002-ski-nb-002 -Script {i ...
+ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+ CategoryInfo : NotSpecified: (:) [Invoke-WUJob], FileNotFoundException
+ FullyQualifiedErrorId : System.IO.FileNotFoundException,PSWindowsUpdate.InvokeWUJob
I've installed everything on remote machines to : Windows\System32\WindowsPowerShell\v1.0\Modules\PSWindowsUpdate but it looks like it still does not see the module ?
I have a lab environment using Server 2016 and Windows 10 VMs. On the windows 10 machine, I’m using the Add-Computer command to join a domain (windurst.net) using the domain administrator account but get access denied. The command I have in PowerShell is
Add-Computer -DomainName "windurst.net" -OUPath "OU=Test,OU=Workstations,OU=Windurst,DC=Windurst,DC=Net"
I can join the domain manually with no issues with the domain administrator account, but it does not work if I’m using the PowerShell command. The OU folder structure is as follows: Windurst > Workstations > Test.
I know this command works on Windows 7, but I haven’t tested it in my lab environment as yet. Going to build a Win 7 machine and post the results. Thanks in advance for any help you can give.
The solution was to run PowerShell as administrator.
Please try running powershell as admin.
Hope it helps :)
Currently i am working on taskpads for delegating some permissions to remote admins.I have following questions;
-> For Importing active directory module in powershell , shopuld it be locally installed or can it be imported remotely from a windows 2008 R2 DC?
-> For taskpads to work on remote workstations, should the administrative tools be installed on all the remote machines or is there a centralized way of maintaining them?
Please do let me know if anymore clarifications/questions regarding my efforts.
You can import remote module in this way (remoting must be enabled on remote server):
Create a Powershell remote session to a server with the activedirectory module installed.
$Session = New-PSsession -Computername Server1
Use the newly created remote Powershell session to import the module to that session
Invoke-Command -Command {Import-Module ActiveDirectory} -Session $Session
Use that session with the modules to add the available commandlets from the activedirectory module to your local Powershell session adding a name prefix.
Import-PSSession -Session $Session -Module ActiveDirectory -Prefix RM
The code above enables the use of Active Directory commandlets on a computer that doesn’t have this module installed.
Use AD commandlets in the Powershell command shell with modified names based on the -Prefix set above:
Get-RMAdUser instead of the standard Get-ADUser
Get-RMAdComputer instead of the standard Get-ADComputer
You can avoid the -Prefix RM but it's handy for remember that are imported from remote.
For taskpad I'm pretty sure that must be present on each client installing RSAT with the ADUC mmc snap-in.
I have a windows 2003 box setup with virtual box and I can't powershell to work with it.
I try this on my windows 7 machine
Get-Service –ComputerName myserver
I get back
Get-Service : Cannot open Service Control Manager on computer 'myserver'. This operation might require other privileges.
At Script1.ps1:2 char:4
+ gsv <<<< -cn myserver
+ CategoryInfo : NotSpecified: (:) [Get-Service], InvalidOperationException
+ FullyQualifiedErrorId : System.InvalidOperationException,Microsoft.PowerShell.Commands.GetServiceCommand
While searching around I found I should try and use Enable-PSRemoting.
I did this and now when I try to use it I get
WinRM already is set up to receive requests on this machine. WinRM
already is set up for remote management on this machine.
Yet I still get the same error. Is this because I am using a virtual machine? I setup the virtual OS to be on my domain and I can even use my AD account credentials to log in.
I can get other information back from it.
So it is not like I can't connect to it with powershell.
With PowerShell V2 you've got two approachs for remote commands.
Commands with built-in remoting :
A small set of commands in PowerShell v2 have a -ComputerName parameter, which allows you to specify the target machine to access.
Get-Process
Get-Service
Set-Service
Clear-EventLog
Get-Counter
Get-EventLog
Show-EventLog
Limit-EventLog
New-EventLog
Remove-EventLog
Write-EventLog
Restart-Computer
Stop-Computer
Get-HotFix
These commands do their own remoting either because the underlying infrastructure already supports remoting or they address scenarios that are of particular importance to system management. They are built on the top of DCOM and, on the access point of view, you can use them when you can establish a session with the remote machine with commands like NET.exe or PSExec.exe.
You are trying to use one of them and you've got a problem with credentials (-cred parameter), because your token credentials can't be used to establish an admin session to the remote machine.
The PowerShell remoting subsystem :
Before you can use PowerShell remoting to access a remote computer, the remoting service on that computer has to be explicitly enabled. You do so using the Enable-PSRemoting cmdlet. If you are working in workgroup you also need to enable the server to enter on your client computer with this command (on your client computer as administrator):
Set-Item WSMan:\localhost\Client\TrustedHosts *
Then, you will use New-PSSession Cmdlet (with -computername and -credentials) to create a session object. Then Invoke-Command (with -session and -scriptblock) cmdlet allows you to remotely invoke a scriptblock on another computer. This is the base element for most of the features in remoting. You can also use Enter-PSSession to establish an interactive (SSL like) PowerShell command line with the server.
Useful link : Layman’s guide to PowerShell 2.0 remoting
Test this :
$sess = New-PSSession -ComputerName myServer-Credential (Get-Credential)
Invoke-Command -Session $sess -ScriptBlock {get-service}
...
Remove-PSSession -Session $sess
If it is still important, here is my workaround:
I got an unprivileged user called 'usser' who wants powershell(v2) remoting from client A to server B.
Steps:
enable-psremoting on Targetserver B as admin
Set-PSSessionConfiguration -Name Microsoft.PowerShell -ShowSecurityDescriptorUI on Targetserver B as admin
Add "usser" with full privileges
Now comes the exciting part:
sc sdshow scmanager on Targetserver B as admin
Copy the SDDL output
sc sdset scmanager (f.e.:)"D:(A;;CC;;;AU)(A;;CCLCRPRC;;;IU)(A;;CCLCRPRC;;;SU)(A;;CCLCRPWPRC;;;SY)(A;;KA;;;BA)S:(AU;FA;KA;;;WD)(AU;OIIOFA;GA;;;WD)" , in the Output you have to fill after this part (A;;CCLCRPWPRC;;;SY) this = (A;;KA;;;SID)
SID stands of course for the SID of the unprivileged "usser"-user
when everything should be fine, it will similiar looks like this :
D:(A;;CC;;;AU)(A;;CCLCRPRC;;;IU)(A;;CCLCRPRC;;;SU)(A;;CCLCRPWPRC;;;SY)(A;;KA;;;S-1-5-21-4233383628-1788409597-1873130553-1161)(A;;KA;;;BA)S:(AU;FA;KA;;;WD)(AU;OIIOFA;GA;;;WD)
Hope you will enjoy that little but complicated workaround.
Viewing and manipulating services requires administrative privileges on the target machine.
I was able to duplicate your error message by attempting to run Get-Service -ComputerName MyServer while logged in as a user account that doesn't have administrative rights to the server in question.
You can resolve this by either granting the workstation user account administrative privileges on the target server or by creating a a local group on the server and granting invocation privileges to members of that group. If you want to do the latter, see the following article.
msgoodies: Using a PS Session without having Administrative Permissions
Building on #scusi marcus's brilliant answer here:
Let's say I have an unprivileged/limited user called 'user1' who wants powershell(v2+) remoting from client machine A to targetserver B.
Steps:
From elevated powershell prompt on targetserver B, run enable-psremoting. Accept several Y/N dialog confirmations or else run with -force switch.
In same elevated prompt as step 1, Set-PSSessionConfiguration -Name Microsoft.PowerShell -ShowSecurityDescriptorUI
In the resulting dialog, add "user1". Read privileges should be sufficient unless you are planning on remotely manipulating services, in which case you will want Full Control.
On targetserver B, from an elevated (non-powershell) prompt or as an administrator, run sc sdshow scmanager. Copy the SDDL output. May look something like this: D:(A;;CC;;;AU)(A;;CCLCRPRC;;;IU)(A;;CCLCRPRC;;;SU)(A;;CCLCRPWPRC;;;SY)(A;;KA;;;BA)S:(AU;FA;KA;;;WD)(AU;OIIOFA;GA;;;WD)
UPDATE: If we add the limited user to the target computer's Remote Management Users group, we can add (A;;LCRPWPDTLO;;;RM) to the D: portion of the above SDDL string, and skip steps 5 and 6 below.
Determine the SID of the underprivileged user account (in our case, "user1"). (Hint: try wmic useraccount where name='user1' get sid)
Insert the following text into the output we copied in step 5: (A;;KA;;;*SID*) where *SID* is the SID of the user determined in step 5. Insert it somewhere in a place before the S: part of the SDDL string retrieved in step 4. So now you should have a string looking something like this: D:(A;;CC;;;AU)(A;;CCLCRPRC;;;IU)(A;;CCLCRPRC;;;SU)(A;;CCLCRPWPRC;;;SY)(A;;KA;;;S-1-5-21-4233383628-1788409597-1873130553-1161)(A;;KA;;;BA)S:(AU;FA;KA;;;WD)(AU;OIIOFA;GA;;;WD)
On targetserver B, run sc sdset scmanager followed by our new modified SDDL string. So the entire command would look something like this:
sc sdset scmanager D:(A;;CC;;;AU)(A;;CCLCRPRC;;;IU)(A;;CCLCRPRC;;;SU)(A;;CCLCRPWPRC;;;SY)(A;;KA;;;S-1-5-21-4233383628-1788409597-1873130553-1161)(A;;KA;;;BA)S:(AU;FA;KA;;;WD)(AU;OIIOFA;GA;;;WD)
You should now be able to remotely access the Service Control Manager on the remote server while logged into client machine A as "user1".
On client machine A, you may find that when you run Get-Service –ComputerName remoteserver not all services are listed. You may need to repeat the above process (starting at step 4) for a specific service that you need remote access to, but which is not listed in your Get-Service output on client machine A. For instance, if the sqlserveragent service is not listed (but you know it is present on the targetserver), you would again log in to targetserver B and execute sc sdshow but this time not for scmanager but for the sqlserveragent service, so sc sdshow sqlserveragent. You would again receive some SDDL output that would need to be manipulated as above. At this point, it may be worth learning more about SDDL (Google it - this link was helpful for me), with the main caveat to watch for the D: and S: portions of the SDDL string and make sure you aren't messing with the S: part.
I know that this isn't the ideal answer to this question, but I was having a similar issue trying to use PowerShell to talk to a Windows 7 box. Turns out, WMI hadn't been installed with the native PSv2 that comes with Win7.
As soon as I installed v3 as part of the WMI 3.0 package, the problem solved itself. I'd suggest making sure that all the relevant WMI services are running on your server. Unless you have conflicts, I'd also recommend upgrading to WMI 3.0.