I'm currently writing a script to automate a number of checks, I have a number of clients which I want to automatically log into one of their servers or use an app hosted via RDweb.
Right now my script works fine, however, I'm only able to get to the point that it'll start to execute the RDP pointer, I'm wondering if there's a way to hit "connect":
The method I'm currently using to run this:
[System.Diagnostics.Process]::Start("c:\file\path\file.rdp")
Is there a better way to run the .RDP file which will also allow you to "Connect"? I've also attempted to tick the "don't ask me" again, the next day it'll still prompt me with this message.
A solution I've found to start an RDP session that seems to work quite good is the following:
function Connect-RDP {
param (
[Parameter(Mandatory=$true)]
$ComputerName,
[System.Management.Automation.Credential()]
$Credential
)
# take each computername and process it individually
$ComputerName | ForEach-Object {
# if the user has submitted a credential, store it
# safely using cmdkey.exe for the given connection
if ($PSBoundParameters.ContainsKey('Credential'))
{
# extract username and password from credential
$User = $Credential.UserName
$Password = $Credential.GetNetworkCredential().Password
# save information using cmdkey.exe
cmdkey.exe /generic:$_ /user:$User /pass:$Password
}
# initiate the RDP connection
# connection will automatically use cached credentials
# if there are no cached credentials, you will have to log on
# manually, so on first use, make sure you use -Credential to submit
# logon credential
mstsc.exe /v $_ /f
}
}
Then you call it with Connect-rdp -ComputerName myserver -Credential (Get-Credential ).
Maybe you can adjust your script to use this cmdlet instead of your file.rdp.
I found the solution here:
https://www.powershellmagazine.com/2014/04/18/automatic-remote-desktop-connection/
Another way you could try is this:
[void][System.Reflection.Assembly]::LoadWithPartialName('System.Windows.Forms')
# Get the ID of the process
$WindowsHandle = Get-Process | Where-Object { $_.MainWindowTitle -Match 'Remote Desktop Connection' } | Select-Object -ExpandProperty Id
# Activate the window
$wshell = New-Object -ComObject wscript.shell;
$wshell.AppActivate($WindowsHandle) | Out-Null
# SendKey to connect
[System.Windows.Forms.SendKeys]::SendWait("%{c}")
%{c} stands for ALT+C
The modifier keys are:
Key | Code
-----------
SHIFT +
CTRL ^
ALT %
So I need to clear a user's run dialog history which I can do perfectly fine with "reg delete HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Windows etc..." from an elevated powershell window on the logged in user's machine, but what I'm looking to do is that same command but from a SYSTEM powershell process. I have already used psexec to create a powershell window which runs as SYSTEM, but because you can't just use HKEY_CURRENT_USER as SYSTEM with the same results, I am finding it quite difficult. If I could just run that command but as username\Administrator then I wouldn't have this problem.
Also to note, if I can somehow grab the username of the logged on user (from SYSTEM still) in one line in plain text (with no other output in sight), then I can store the username in a variable and convert that to an SID and use HKEY_USERS instead.
P.S. Don't ask why I'm running powershell as SYSTEM, I know what I'm doing :D
you can use get-process under the system context powershell and filter where explorer.exe process is running, get the account it is running under then use to convert to SID and go through the registry.
something like this assuming only 1 explorer.exe process is running which is the norm on windows client OS.
$proc = Get-CimInstance Win32_Process -Filter "name = 'explorer.exe'"
$owner = Invoke-CimMethod -InputObject $proc -MethodName GetOwner
$username = $owner.user
$username will contain the user, $owner will also contain domain and a few other things.
to convert to sid
$objUser = New-Object System.Security.Principal.NTAccount($owner.Domain, $owner.User)
$strSID = $objUser.Translate([System.Security.Principal.SecurityIdentifier])
$strSID.Value
I have the below PowerShell script (myscript.ps1) in which I ask for username and password. Depending on the username and password it copies a file to a certain destination.
$credentials = Get-Credential
if ($credentials.Username -eq "user1" -And $credentials.GetNetworkCredential().password -eq "pass1")
{ Copy-Item "test1.pdf" "\test\test1.pdf"; }
else
{ Copy-Item "test2.pdf" "\test\test2.pdf"; }
Requirement: I want to make this file protected so no one can edit it and see the username and password.
PS2EXE
I found a solution found here which converts the PowerShell script to an .exe file. When I originally run the script using PowerShell a dialog box appears allowing me to enter the username and password:
After the .exe is generated and when I run it the credentials dialog box no longer appears. Instead, the console appears saying "Credential:"
I don't know why? I want the credentials form to still appear when running the exe. Any thoughts please?
Q: Why does the EXE prompt with "Credential"?
This isn't an answer to the real question, and is based on guessing/supposition about PS2EXE, but I hope it is useful to clear up some confusion.
Having looked briefly at the PS2EXE page linked above, it seems that this utility encodes the script in Base64 and bundles it with a lightweight (?) custom PowerShell host. When run, I suppose the EXE starts the host, decodes the script and runs it.
The problem is that the Get-Credential cmdlet is running within a PS host that probably can't interact with the desktop. That is, it can't put up the GUI prompt for credentials. It therefore needs to prompt for the Credential property on the command line, explaining why you see that behaviour.
Workaround with Read-Host?
Instead of trying to use Get-Credential to prompt for username and password, you could embrace what PS2EXE seems to be doing and just use Read-Host:
$UserName = Read-Host "Enter username"
$Password = Read-Host "Enter password" -AsSecureString
$Credentials = New-Object System.Management.Automation.PSCredential $UserName,$Password
if ($credentials.Username -eq "user1" -And $credentials.GetNetworkCredential().password -eq "pass1")
{ ... }
Using -AsSecureString will hide the password on the screen. The $Password variable will be of type System.Security.SecureString, which can be used to create a PSCredential object as shown.
You'd need to test this, but it seems that you're able to read from the shell but not from a GUI prompt.
And just to be clear: none of this is anywhere near best-practice security. If you need authentication/authorization for these activities, step back and look at the problem again.
Workaround with two scripts?
It seems that PS2EXE doesn't support -AsSecureString in the same way that normal PowerShell does, i.e. it doesn't hide the characters. A possible workaround for this would be to collect the username and password from the user in one script and then pass them to a PS2EXE-converted script for processing.
Launch-MyScript.ps1:
$Credentials = Get-Credential
& MyScript.exe $Credentials.Username $Credentials.Password
MyScript.exe (coverted with PS2EXE):
param($Username,$Password)
$Credentials = New-Object System.Management.Automation.PSCredential $Username,$Password
if ($Credentials.Username -eq "user1" -and
$Credentials.GetNetworkCredential().password -eq "pass1")
{
...
}
The user runs Launch-MyScript.ps1 and completes the password prompt. Then the EXE is run automatically with the username and password passed in as arguments. Note that, as shown above, the password is a Secure String. Test this; I'm not using PS2EXE so it's a theoretical solution at the moment.
If you can't pass $Password along the pipeline as a Secure String object, you can convert it to text with ConvertFrom-SecureString in the first script, then conver it back with ConvertTo-SecureString in the second one.
According to this article http://windowsitpro.com/powershell/protect-your-powershell-scripts you should first set ur execution policy to AllSigned by Set-ExecutionPolicy AllSigned, then create a certificate using makecert cmdlet.
Then u can sign single script using Set-AuthenticodeSignature cmdlet or use .pfx File to Sign a Script which appears even safer.
Hope it helps a bit.
How do I get the current username in Windows PowerShell?
I found it:
$env:UserName
There is also:
$env:UserDomain
$env:ComputerName
On Windows, you can:
[System.Security.Principal.WindowsIdentity]::GetCurrent().Name
I thought it would be valuable to summarize and compare the given answers.
If you want to access the environment variable:
(easier/shorter/memorable option)
[Environment]::UserName -- #ThomasBratt
$env:username -- #Eoin
whoami -- #galaktor
If you want to access the Windows access token:
(more dependable option)
[System.Security.Principal.WindowsIdentity]::GetCurrent().Name -- #MarkSeemann
If you want the name of the logged in user
(rather than the name of the user running the PowerShell instance)
$(Get-WMIObject -class Win32_ComputerSystem | select username).username -- #TwonOfAn on this other forum
Comparison
#Kevin Panko's comment on #Mark Seemann's answer deals with choosing one of the categories over the other:
[The Windows access token approach] is the most secure answer, because $env:USERNAME can be altered by the user, but this will not be fooled by doing that.
In short, the environment variable option is more succinct, and the Windows access token option is more dependable.
I've had to use #Mark Seemann's Windows access token approach in a PowerShell script that I was running from a C# application with impersonation.
The C# application is run with my user account, and it runs the PowerShell script as a service account. Because of a limitation of the way I'm running the PowerShell script from C#, the PowerShell instance uses my user account's environment variables, even though it is run as the service account user.
In this setup, the environment variable options return my account name, and the Windows access token option returns the service account name (which is what I wanted), and the logged in user option returns my account name.
Testing
Also, if you want to compare the options yourself, here is a script you can use to run a script as another user. You need to use the Get-Credential cmdlet to get a credential object, and then run this script with the script to run as another user as argument 1, and the credential object as argument 2.
Usage:
$cred = Get-Credential UserTo.RunAs
Run-AsUser.ps1 "whoami; pause" $cred
Run-AsUser.ps1 "[System.Security.Principal.WindowsIdentity]::GetCurrent().Name; pause" $cred
Contents of Run-AsUser.ps1 script:
param(
[Parameter(Mandatory=$true)]
[string]$script,
[Parameter(Mandatory=$true)]
[System.Management.Automation.PsCredential]$cred
)
Start-Process -Credential $cred -FilePath 'powershell.exe' -ArgumentList 'noprofile','-Command',"$script"
(you may need a hyphen before noprofile, like so)
Start-Process -Credential $cred -FilePath 'powershell.exe' -ArgumentList '-noprofile','-Command',"$script"
$env:username is the easiest way
I'd like to throw in the whoami command, which basically is a nice alias for doing %USERDOMAIN%\%USERNAME% as proposed in other answers.
Write-Host "current user:"
Write-Host $(whoami)
[Environment]::UserName returns just the user name. E.g. bob
[System.Security.Principal.WindowsIdentity]::GetCurrent().Name returns the user name, prefixed by its domain where appropriate. E.g. SOMEWHERENICE\bob
Now that PowerShell Core (aka v6) has been released, and people may want to write cross-platform scripts, many of the answers here will not work on anything other than Windows.
[Environment]::UserName appears to be the best way of getting the current username on all platforms supported by PowerShell Core if you don't want to add platform detection and special casing to your code.
I have used $env:username in the past, but a colleague pointed out it's an environment variable and can be changed by the user and therefore, if you really want to get the current user's username, you shouldn't trust it.
I'd upvote Mark Seemann's answer:
[System.Security.Principal.WindowsIdentity]::GetCurrent().Name
But I'm not allowed to. With Mark's answer, if you need just the username, you may have to parse it out since on my system, it returns hostname\username and on domain joined machines with domain accounts it will return domain\username.
I would not use whoami.exe since it's not present on all versions of Windows, and it's a call out to another binary and may give some security teams fits.
Just building on the work of others here:
[String] ${stUserDomain},[String] ${stUserAccount} = [System.Security.Principal.WindowsIdentity]::GetCurrent().Name.split("\")
$username=( ( Get-WMIObject -class Win32_ComputerSystem | Select-Object -ExpandProperty username ) -split '\\' )[1]
$username
The second username is for display only purposes only if you copy and paste it.
I didn't see any Add-Type based examples. Here is one using the GetUserName directly from advapi32.dll.
$sig = #'
[DllImport("advapi32.dll", SetLastError = true)]
public static extern bool GetUserName(System.Text.StringBuilder sb, ref Int32 length);
'#
Add-Type -MemberDefinition $sig -Namespace Advapi32 -Name Util
$size = 64
$str = New-Object System.Text.StringBuilder -ArgumentList $size
[Advapi32.util]::GetUserName($str, [ref]$size) |Out-Null
$str.ToString()
Sometimes the Username attribute has no data in Win32_ComputerSystem even though there's a user signed in. What works for me is to use quser and parse the output. It's not perfect, but it works. E.g.:
$quserdata = #()
$quserdata = quser
$userid = ($quserdata[1] -split ' ')[1]
$userid
Note: if this is run as the user who is logged in, quser adds '>' symbol to the output. Then you need to get rid of that symbol, but mostly this is needed for code run as system or another account than the one that is logged in.
If you're used to batch, you can call
$user=$(cmd.exe /c echo %username%)
This basically steals the output from what you would get if you had a batch file with just "echo %username%".
I find easiest to use: cd $home\Desktop\
will take you to current user desktop
In my case, I needed to retrieve the username to enable the script to change the path, ie. c:\users\%username%. I needed to start the script by changing the path to the users desktop. I was able to do this, with help from above and elsewhere, by using the get-location applet.
You may have another, or even better way to do it, but this worked for me:
$Path = Get-Location
Set-Location $Path\Desktop
In my case, I needed to retrieve the username to enable the script to change the path, ie. c:\users\%username%\. I needed to start the script by changing the path to the users desktop. I was able to do this, with help from above and elsewhere, by using the get-location applet.
You may have another, or even better way to do it, but this worked for me:
$Path = Get-Location
Set-Location $Path\Desktop
I'm trying to copy a file from one server to another server so that it doesn't ask me to enter my login info and I don't have to store the password blatently in the code. The problem is, it's still coming up with a credential request GUI, even though I give the -Credential parameter. This is how I store the password in a file:
read-host -assecurestring | convertfrom-securestring | out-file C:\secString.txt
Then the code looks like this:
function GetSecureLogin() {
$username = "usa02xxxswg2\20xbackup"
$password = get-content C:\secString.txt | convertto-securestring
$cred = new-object -typename System.Management.Automation.PSCredential -argumentlist $username, $password
}
function CopyFileToFolder ([string]$Source, [string]$destination){
Copy-Item "$Source" -Destination "$destination" -Credential $cred #this is where the login info box is coming up but shouldn't be
}
######################start here#####################
$cred = ""
GetSecureLogin
$tempSource = "filename.txt"
$ToLocation = "$ToLoc"
CopyFileToFolder $tempSource $ToLoc
Any ideas? I'm relatively new to PowerShell, so I could be doing something silly. I'm not sure how to tell if $cred is getting back to my Copy function ok or if it's out of scope.
I've looked at these examples but I'm having trouble deciding if I need to do something different because they are specifying the server info and I'm trying to avoid that since I just want to use UNC path like I was doing before. The copying was working fine without login because I was using my Active Directory login to save the task. Now we want to use a locally saved login (where the script is run) and then it needs a different local login when it's trying to access the other server.
copy-item with alt cred,
powershell without prompt for cred,
copy without cred,
copy with alt cred,
cred without password prompt
I'm trying to figure out if returning $cred from my GetSecureLogin function, and assigning it to $cred in the main part of the script will fix the problem where it's asking me for the login info when I do the copy. It looks like my co-worker moved all the directories, so I still have to test this once I figure out where he moved them to.
Looks like I figured it out. I did it like this link. It was a little tricky in that I didn't have to use the directory that came after my sharename, but once I got rid of the subdirectory, it worked.
copy with credentials and New-PSDrive