RoyalServer Powershell
about_RoyalServer.PowerShell
SHORT DESCRIPTION
Describes how to manage RoyalServer using PowerShell Commandlets.
LONG DESCRIPTION
Royal Server provides a list of loaded Royal Server Modules
which contain Commands
which in turn require a list of Parameters
. All this is exposed and discoverable via PowerShell Commandlets.
EXAMPLES
SETUP
In order to work with the RoyalServer PowerShell Commandlets, you need to register them with your PowerShell session. Just issue the following command and you are good to go:
Import-Module RoyalServer.PowerShell
Usually, Royal Server is installed to
%ProgramFiles%\RoyalServer V4
or%ProgramFiles(x86)%\RoyalServer
, respectively.
If you like to have the RoyalServer CommandLets in all your PowerShell sessions, include this line in your PowerShell profile. To locate where your profile is call $profile
in your PowerShell session.
Usually, this location is at %USERPROFILE%\Documents\WindowsPowerShell\Microsoft.PowerShell_profile.ps1
.
FIRST STEPS
Setting up a connection to Royal Server looks like this:
# create a new RoyalServerConfig
$cred = Get-Credential
$config = New-RoyalServerConfig -Host "127.0.0.1" -UseSSL $true -Port 54899 -Credential $cred
WORKING WITH ROYAL SERVER RESPONSES
# gets all available Modules
$response = Get-RoyalServerModule -RoyalServerConfig $config
The variable $response
is of the type RoyalServerPowerShellResponse which contains a list of responses since Royal Server can execute queries against multiple hosts with one request. Examine how many responses you got via $response.Responses.Count
. The Responses collection contains entries of the type RoyalServerPowerShellSingleResponse
. These contain two members: Result
which is a System.DataTable
with the actual data and MetaData
which contains some additional information.
The following example outputs the loaded modules of Royal Server:
# loop over all responses,
# you can omit this if you know there is only one and use $response.Responses[0]
foreach($response in $response.Responses)
{
# loop over all rows in $response.Result
foreach($row in $response.Result.Rows)
{
Write-Host ($row[0] + " - " + $row[1])
}
}
To get an overview of all data and row names etc, you can use Out-String
or Out-GridView
:
$response.Responses[0].Result | Out-String
NOTE
In a PowerShell session, you can get information to all commandlets by using the Get-Help
command.
Also, please take a look at our Module Reference for detailed examples for all modules.
SEE ALSO
KEYWORDS
- Royal-Server