Powershell: Get Office Software
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I can run this just fine and it screen outputs like a champ
Get-Content -Path c:\scripts\Computers.txt | ForEach-Object {Get-WmiObject -Class Win32_Product -ComputerName $_} | Format-Table Name,Vendor,Version,Caption,LocalPackage
Then when I add:
Get-Content -Path c:\scripts\Computers.txt | ForEach-Object {Get-WmiObject -Class Win32_Product -ComputerName $} | Format-Table Name,Vendor,Version,Caption,LocalPackage |Where-Object -FilterScript {$.Name -like "Microsoft Office*"}
To only find Microsoft Office, it just completes and does no screen outputGet-Content -Path c:\scripts\Computers.txt | ForEach-Object {Get-WmiObject -Class Win32_Product -ComputerName $_} | Format-Table Name,Vendor,Version,Caption,LocalPackage | Export-CSV -NoTypeInformation "C:\scripts\installed.csv";
This returns a file with just guid only or blank in testingTrying to run this in an AD domain to get Microsoft Office installs and versions for prep of a O365 migration.
So I would like the format of the top one formatted into CSV and remove the other crap and just list me "Microsoft Office*" -
Could you put your code in via the form that removes all the markup? It's messing with my ability to help ya.
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Once I figure out how
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@Texkonc said in Powershell: Get Office Software:
Once I figure out how
Just start a line with four spaces.
Or use back ticks, three of them, on the line before and after the code.
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This post is deleted! -
@scottalanmiller said in Powershell: Get Office Software:
@Texkonc said in Powershell: Get Office Software:
Once I figure out how
Just start a line with four spaces.
Or use back ticks, three of them, on the line before and after the code.
No Dice
and What? -
Get-Content -Path c:\scripts\Computers.txt | ForEach-Object {Get-WmiObject -Class Win32_Product -ComputerName $_} | Format-Table Name,Vendor,Version,Caption,LocalPackage Get-Content -Path c:\scripts\Computers.txt | ForEach-Object {Get-WmiObject -Class Win32_Product -ComputerName $_} | Format-Table Name,Vendor,Version,Caption,LocalPackage |Where-Object -FilterScript {$_.Name -like "*Microsoft Office**"} Get-Content -Path c:\scripts\Computers.txt | ForEach-Object {Get-WmiObject -Class Win32_Product -ComputerName $_} | Format-Table Name,Vendor,Version,Caption,LocalPackage
or
Get-Content -Path c:\scripts\Computers.txt | ForEach-Object {Get-WmiObject -Class Win32_Product -ComputerName $_} | Format-Table Name,Vendor,Version,Caption,LocalPackage
Get-Content -Path c:\scripts\Computers.txt | ForEach-Object {Get-WmiObject -Class Win32_Product -ComputerName $_} | Format-Table Name,Vendor,Version,Caption,LocalPackage |Where-Object -FilterScript {$_.Name -like "*Microsoft Office**"}
Get-Content -Path c:\scripts\Computers.txt | ForEach-Object {Get-WmiObject -Class Win32_Product -ComputerName $_} | Format-Table Name,Vendor,Version,Caption,LocalPackage | Export-CSV -NoTypeInformation "C:\scripts\installed.csv";
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Hi
Have you looked at this.
https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/bb977556.aspx
MAP
THis seems to be a tool from MS that does what you want. -
@Texkonc said in Powershell: Get Office Software:
@scottalanmiller said in Powershell: Get Office Software:
@Texkonc said in Powershell: Get Office Software:
Once I figure out how
Just start a line with four spaces.
Or use back ticks, three of them, on the line before and after the code.
No Dice
and What?How did it not work? Just put four spaces in front of your code.
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I just did it as an example. You can't have it still tied to the line above, you need to hit enter to separate it. The way that you had it, it was four spaces between that line and the line before, it wasn't a line on its own yet.
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I'm not sure of your end goal, so this way of querying the office version may not suit your needs... but here it is anyways:
I query the registry to find the version of office on a PC in some scripts:
reg query "HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Uninstall\O365ProPlusRetail - en-us" /v DisplayVersion reg query "HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Uninstall\O365ProPlusRetail - en-us" /v DisplayName
And if you like to get dirty:
reg query "HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Uninstall" /s /f *Office*
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@momurda
I just tried using the MAP toolkit from MS as i thought it would be a useful inventory tool. You know, since MS makes their money selling software, you would think they would make a tool that would let you inventory their software and tell you license info.
It is just another half assed .exe from MS that really does nothing useful.
It tells you how many pcs you have that are 'ready' for a certain product, not what is currently installed, no license keys, nothing useful.
Seriously what is the point of this? -
@momurda said in Powershell: Get Office Software:
@momurda
I just tried using the MAP toolkit from MS as i thought it would be a useful inventory tool. You know, since MS makes their money selling software, you would think they would make a tool that would let you inventory their software and tell you license info.
It is just another half assed .exe from MS that really does nothing useful.
It tells you how many pcs you have that are 'ready' for a certain product, not what is currently installed, no license keys, nothing useful.
Seriously what is the point of this?Shocker...
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@momurda said in Powershell: Get Office Software:
@momurda
I just tried using the MAP toolkit from MS as i thought it would be a useful inventory tool. You know, since MS makes their money selling software, you would think they would make a tool that would let you inventory their software and tell you license info.
It is just another half assed .exe from MS that really does nothing useful.
It tells you how many pcs you have that are 'ready' for a certain product, not what is currently installed, no license keys, nothing useful.
Seriously what is the point of this?Making licensing easy makes it hard to oversell.
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@Tim_G said in Powershell: Get Office Software:
And if you like to get dirty:
reg query "HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Uninstall" /s /f *Office*
The best one, but need to run it against remote machines. Issue with this one, is not all machines might not have remote registry on. Hence a WMI call is better.
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@Texkonc said in Powershell: Get Office Software:
@Tim_G said in Powershell: Get Office Software:
And if you like to get dirty:
reg query "HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Uninstall" /s /f *Office*
The best one, but need to run it against remote machines. Issue with this one, is not all machines might not have remote registry on. Hence a WMI call is better.
You do something like this.
Invoke-Command -ComputerName HOSTNAME -Credential domain\username `
-ScriptBlock {
cmd /k reg query "HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Uninstall" /s /f Office
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@black3dynamite said in Powershell: Get Office Software:
@Texkonc said in Powershell: Get Office Software:
@Tim_G said in Powershell: Get Office Software:
And if you like to get dirty:
reg query "HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Uninstall" /s /f *Office*
The best one, but need to run it against remote machines. Issue with this one, is not all machines might not have remote registry on. Hence a WMI call is better.
You do something like this.
Invoke-Command -ComputerName HOSTNAME -Credential domain\username `
-ScriptBlock {
cmd /k reg query "HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Uninstall" /s /f Office
}I have about 50 machines, I am not going to enter the host name everytime, I need it to pull from a list.
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I spent a decent amount of time on this out of curiosity and finally got something together that I actually tested with various domain PCs, and works:
$computers = Get-Content -Path C:\computers.txt ForEach ($computer in $computers) { Invoke-Command -ComputerName $computer -ErrorAction SilentlyContinue {Get-ItemProperty HKLM:\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Uninstall\* | Select-Object DisplayName, DisplayVersion, Publisher, InstallDate | Where-Object {$_.DisplayName -like '*Microsoft Office*'} | Export-CSV -NoTypeInformation "C:\test.csv"} }
I suppose you can figure out how to change it to what will work in your environment if you have issues connecting to computers. This should get you going.
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That is a great script.
I ran it on a 2012 nonR2 and a 2008R2, and my desktop win10. I can not get it to write the output to a file on any of the 3. If I comment out the output to a file, it screen prints fine. -
Try this.
$computers = Get-Content -Path C:\computers.txt ForEach ($computer in $computers) { $results = Invoke-Command -ComputerName $computer -ErrorAction SilentlyContinue { Get-ItemProperty HKLM:\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Uninstall\* -ErrorAction SilentlyContinue | ` Select-Object DisplayName, DisplayVersion, Publisher, InstallDate | ` Where-Object {$_.DisplayName -like '*Microsoft Office*'} } $results | Export-Csv -NoTypeInformation -Path "C:\test.csv" }