Windows Powershell in Action
Bruce G. Payette
- 出版商: Manning
- 出版日期: 2007-02-05
- 售價: $1,680
- 貴賓價: 9.5 折 $1,596
- 語言: 英文
- 頁數: 576
- 裝訂: Paperback
- ISBN: 1932394907
- ISBN-13: 9781932394900
-
相關分類:
Powershell
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商品描述
“The book on PowerShell, it has all the secrets.”
—James Truher, PowerShell Program Manager, Microsoft Corporation“Bruce is a walking encyclopedia of every good, bad, solid, and wacky language idea that has been tried... This is a book that only Bruce could have written.”
—Jeffrey Snover, from the ForewordWindows has an easy-to-use interface, but if you want to automate it, life can get hard. That is, unless you use PowerShell, an elegant new dynamic language from Microsoft designed as an all-purpose Windows scripting tool. PowerShell lets you script administrative tasks and control Windows from the command line. Because it was specifically developed for Windows, programmers and power-users can now do things in a shell that previously required VB, VBScript, or C#.
Windows PowerShell in Action was written by Bruce Payette, one of the founding members of the Windows PowerShell team, co-designer of the PowerShell language and the principal author of the PowerShell language implementation. From him you will gain a deep understanding of the language and how best to use it, and you'll love his insights into why PowerShell works the way it does.
This book is a tutorial for sysadmins and developers introducing the PowerShell language and its environment. It shows you how to build scripts and utilities to automate system tasks or create powerful system management tools to handle the day-to-day tasks that drive a Windows administrator's life. It's rich in interesting examples that will spark your imagination. The book covers batch scripting and string processing, COM, WMI, and even .NET and WinForms programming.
Table of contents
Foreword
Preface
Acknowledgments
About this book
Part 1 Learning PowerShell
- 1 Welcome to PowerShell
- 1.1 What is PowerShell?
- 1.2 Soul of a new language
- 1.3 Brushing up on objects
- 1.4 Dude! Wheres my code?
- 1.5 Summary
- 2 The basics
- 2.1 Command concepts and terminology
- 2.2 Parsing and PowerShell
- 2.3 Pipelines and commands
- 2.4 Formatting and output
- 2.5 Summary
- 3 Working with types
- 3.1 Type management in the wild, wild west
- 3.2 Basic types and literals
- 3.3 Type conversions
- 3.4 Summary
- 4 Operators and expressions
- 4.1 Arithmetic operators
- 4.2 The assignment operators
- 4.3 Comparison operators
- 4.4 The pattern matching operators
- 4.5 Logical and bitwise operators
- 4.6 Summary
- 5 Advanced operators and variables
- 5.1 Operators for working with types
- 5.2 The unary operators
- 5.3 Grouping, subexpressions, and array subexpressions
- 5.4 Array operators
- 5.5 Property and method operators
- 5.6 The PowerShell format operator -F
- 5.7 Redirection and the redirection operators
- 5.8 Variables
- 5.9 Summary
- 6 Flow control in scripts
- 6.1 Using the if/elseif/else statement
- 6.2 The while loop
- 6.3 The do/while loop
- 6.4 The for loop
- 6.5 The foreach loop
- 6.6 Labels, break, and continue
- 6.7 The PowerShell switch statement
- 6.8 Flow control using cmdlets
- 6.9 The value of statements
- 6.10 Summary
- 7 Functions and scripts
- 7.1 Function basics
- 7.2 Formal parameters and the param statement
- 7.3 Returning values from functions
- 7.4 Using functions in a pipeline
- 7.5 Managing functions
- 7.6 Scripts at long last
- 7.7 Summary
- 8 Scriptblocks and objects
- 8.1 Scriptblock basics
- 8.2 Building and manipulating objects
- 8.3 A closer look at the type-system plumbing
- 8.4 Extending the PowerShell language
- 8.5 Type extension
- 8.6 Building code at runtime
- 8.7 Summary
- 9 Errors, exceptions, and script debugging
- 9.1 Error handling
- 9.2 Dealing with errors that terminate execution
- 9.3 Script debugging
- 9.4 Nested prompts and breakpoints
- 9.5 Low-level tracing
- 9.6 The PowerShell event log
- 9.7 Summary
Part 2 Using PowerShell
- 10 Processing text, files, and XML
- 10.1 Processing unstructured text
- 10.2 File processing
- 10.3 XML processing
- 10.4 Summary
- 11 Getting fancy?NET and WinForms
- 11.1 Using .NET from PowerShell
- 11.2 PowerShell and the Internet
- 11.3 PowerShell and graphical user interfaces
- 11.4 Summary
- 12 Windows objects: COM and WMI
- 12.1 Working with COM in PowerShell
- 12.2 Working with WMI in PowerShell
- 12.3 So which object model should I choose?
- 12.4 Summary
- 13 Security, security, security
- 13.1 Introduction to security
- 13.2 Security modeling
- 13.3 Securing the PowerShell environment
- 13.4 Signing scripts
- 13.5 Writing secure scripts
- 13.6 Summary
Comparing PowerShell to other languages
Admin examples
The PowerShell grammar
index