Book Image

AWS Tools for PowerShell 6

By : Ramesh Waghmare
Book Image

AWS Tools for PowerShell 6

By: Ramesh Waghmare

Overview of this book

AWS Tools for PowerShell 6 shows you exactly how to automate all the aspects of AWS. You can take advantage of the amazing power of the cloud, yet add powerful scripts and mechanisms to perform common tasks faster than ever before. This book expands on the Amazon documentation with real-world, useful examples and production-ready scripts to automate all the aspects of your new cloud platform. It will cover topics such as managing Windows with PowerShell, setting up security services, administering database services, and deploying and managing networking. You will also explore advanced topics such as PowerShell authoring techniques, and configuring and managing storage and content delivery. By the end of this book, you will be able to use Amazon Web Services to automate and manage Windows servers. You will also have gained a good understanding of automating the AWS infrastructure using simple coding.
Table of Contents (17 chapters)

Building parameterized script

When you start building script for automation that can be used by yourself and others repeatedly for doing some task, building parameterized script is the key. In PowerShell, it is very easy to build the parameterized script using just a simple param keyword in the script file. You may have solved the problem using individual cmdlets, and you now want that one to be used repeatedly for building an automation. Let's review the following script for a better understanding of using parameters:

I created a file called DiskInfo.ps1 in the D:\scripts directory. This script provides you with free GB available on the drive that you pass to this script. I am using Get-CimInstance to get me the computer name and free GB. The param keyword at the top of the script can be seen. You might just need to get a feeling of writing that syntax and nothing more. To make the drive letter mandatory, I used a keyword called Mandatory=$true. Once you saved the file, the script can be run as follows:

PS :\D>.\DiskInfo.ps1 -Drive C:

The beauty of the script is that when you start hitting the tab after the script name on the command prompt, it starts displaying you the parameters that can be passed to the script, which is amazing. This is the way you start building a new set of cmdlets for you. There is nothing else that needs to be done to build your own cmdlets.