Book Image

PowerShell Core for Linux Administrators Cookbook

By : Prashanth Jayaram, Ram Iyer
Book Image

PowerShell Core for Linux Administrators Cookbook

By: Prashanth Jayaram, Ram Iyer

Overview of this book

PowerShell Core, the open source, cross-platform that is based on the open source, cross-platform .NET Core, is not a shell that came out by accident; it was intentionally created to be versatile and easy to learn at the same time. PowerShell Core enables automation on systems ranging from the Raspberry Pi to the cloud. PowerShell Core for Linux Administrators Cookbook uses simple, real-world examples that teach you how to use PowerShell to effectively administer your environment. As you make your way through the book, you will cover interesting recipes on how PowerShell Core can be used to quickly automate complex, repetitive, and time-consuming tasks. In the concluding chapters, you will learn how to develop scripts to automate tasks that involve systems and enterprise management. By the end of this book, you will have learned about the automation capabilities of PowerShell Core, including remote management using OpenSSH, cross-platform enterprise management, working with Docker containers, and managing SQL databases.
Table of Contents (19 chapters)

Creating and working with a simple array

In this recipe, we will see how to initialize a simple array and work with it. And here is the scenario. You have, let's say, a unique requirement. You want to know the process that is consuming the least of the processor time. To this, you add the top five processes consuming the most processor time. Information on how much of what is being used is not necessary; just the name would suffice.

How to do it...

We will first get the process consuming the least CPU and assign it to a variable:

  1. Now, run the following to get the process consuming the least processor time and assign it to a variable:
PS> $Process = get-process | sort-object cpu | select-object -fi 1 -expand processname...