Book Image

Windows Server Automation with PowerShell Cookbook - Fourth Edition

By : Thomas Lee
Book Image

Windows Server Automation with PowerShell Cookbook - Fourth Edition

By: Thomas Lee

Overview of this book

With a foreword from PowerShell creator Jeffrey Snover, this heavily updated edition is designed to help you learn how to use PowerShell 7.1 effectively and manage the core roles, features, and services of Windows Server in an enterprise setting. All scripts are compatible with both Window Server 2022 and 2019. This latest edition equips you with over 100 recipes you'll need in day-to-day work, covering a wide range of fundamental and more advanced use cases. We look at how to install and configure PowerShell 7.1, along with useful new features and optimizations, and how the PowerShell compatibility solution bridges the gap to older versions of PowerShell. Topics include using PowerShell to manage networking and DHCP in Windows Server, objects in Active Directory, Hyper-V, and Azure. Debugging is crucial, so the book shows you how to use some powerful tools to diagnose and resolve issues with Windows Server.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)
16
Other Books You May Enjoy
17
Index

Introduction

Microsoft first launched the Microsoft .NET Framework in June 2000, amid a frenzy of marketing zeal, with the code name Next Generation Windows Services. Microsoft seemed to add the .NET moniker to every product. There was Windows .NET Server (renamed Windows Server 2003), Visual Studio .NET, and even MapPoint .NET. As is often the case, over time, .NET provided features which were superseded by later and newer features based on advances in technology. For example, Simple Object Access Protocol (SOAP) and XML-based web services have given way to Representation State Transfer (REST) and JavaScript Object Notation (JSON).

Microsoft made considerable improvements to .NET with each release and added new features in response to customer feedback. .NET started as closed source as the .NET Framework. Microsoft then transitioned .NET to open source, aka .NET Core. PowerShell 7.0 is based on .NET Core 3.1.

An issue was that, over time, .NET became fragmented across different...