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    Comparing PowerShell to Linux User Manipulation

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    • ObsolesceO
      Obsolesce @scottalanmiller
      last edited by Obsolesce

      So @scottalanmiller , I had to make some serious edits here on your guide due to your extreme bias against Windows / PowerShell. Hopefully you fix them in the OP:

      List Local Users

      Get-LocalUser #PowerShell - simple.
      Cat /etc/passwd | grep "/bin/bash" #BASH - good luck!
      

      Get Details of Specific Local User

      Get-LocalUser salty #PowerShell - Simple, pretty output you can do something with
      id sally #BASH - simple command, nasty output!
      

      Create a New Local User

      New-LocalUser salty #PowerShell - super simple, automatically prompts for password
      useradd sally #BASH - simple
      passwd p@ssw0rd #BASH - simple, insecure
      

      Delete a Local User

      Remove-LocalUser salty #PowerShell - simple enough to guess
      deluser sally #BASH - simple enough to guess
      

      With Tab Completion in PowerShell, these commands are a breeze.
      But if that's still too much to handle...

      With many common commands, there are well-known aliases:

      Remove-LocalUser salty
      rlu salty

      New-LocalUser salty
      nlu salty

      Get-LocalUser salty
      glu salty

      Super simple, nice and easy to handle output. Handles passwords in a single command nlu salty @WrCombs .

      Not sure what you tried @scottalanmiller ...

      scottalanmillerS JaredBuschJ 5 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 1
      • scottalanmillerS
        scottalanmiller @Obsolesce
        last edited by

        @Obsolesce you don't really think that that stuff makes it simple, do you?

        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • scottalanmillerS
          scottalanmiller @Obsolesce
          last edited by

          @Obsolesce said in Managing Windows Local Users with PowerShell:

          Get-LocalUser #PowerShell - simple.
          Cat /etc/passwd | grep "/bin/bash" #BASH - good luck!

          This isn't how it works. All users are listed in /etc/passwd. Grepping for BASH does nothing useful, and would be very misleading. If you want a list of all users, it's just "cat /etc/passwd". That simple.

          ObsolesceO 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • ObsolesceO
            Obsolesce @scottalanmiller
            last edited by

            @scottalanmiller said in Managing Windows Local Users with PowerShell:

            @Obsolesce said in Managing Windows Local Users with PowerShell:

            Get-LocalUser #PowerShell - simple.
            Cat /etc/passwd | grep "/bin/bash" #BASH - good luck!

            This isn't how it works. All users are listed in /etc/passwd. Grepping for BASH does nothing useful, and would be very misleading. If you want a list of all users, it's just "cat /etc/passwd". That simple.

            Yeah but who wants to look at a list of like 50 system users before finding what they are really after. And the output is ugly AF tbh.

            scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • ObsolesceO
              Obsolesce @scottalanmiller
              last edited by

              @scottalanmiller said in Managing Windows Local Users with PowerShell:

              That simple.

              Not as simple as, simply glu.

              scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • scottalanmillerS
                scottalanmiller @Obsolesce
                last edited by

                @Obsolesce said in Managing Windows Local Users with PowerShell:

                Get-LocalUser salty #PowerShell - Simple, pretty output you can do something with
                id sally #BASH - simple command, nasty output!

                You are mentioning BASH, but using "id". You are mixing what is the shell and what is a tool, this is what we were talking about in the other thread. You have to really understand when you are using a shell and when you are not to make useful comparisons.

                But the info here isn't uniform. In one case you use /etc/passwd and in another you are looking for a tool. Why switch?

                If you want basic info, just grep username /etc/passwd. Super simple (and standard... this is the biggest thing in Linux, same format over and over, not a unique tool for every task like PowerShell.)

                If you want more info, yes use the insanely simple and easy to read id command. Which you say has "nasty output", but compare to PowerShell. Short, simpler, and couldn't be easier to read. The PowerShell is fine, but way more verbose.

                Your bias is showing, there was no reason to post a comparison here, this is a thread about Windows Systems Management. But it does show just how extremely ridiculous PowerShell is, and the lengths that are necessary to make it seem reasonable.

                Memorizing several different commands are another set of "well known" crazy little abbreviations that are dangerous if you can't memorize millions of them.

                And you conveniently left out that almost no Windows has this PowerShell stuff, it's non-standard! Only extremely current versions have this without having to go through hoops to install it extra. This isn't universally workable for PowerShell.

                ObsolesceO JaredBuschJ 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • scottalanmillerS
                  scottalanmiller @Obsolesce
                  last edited by

                  @Obsolesce said in Managing Windows Local Users with PowerShell:

                  @scottalanmiller said in Managing Windows Local Users with PowerShell:

                  That simple.

                  Not as simple as, simply glu.

                  Actually, it's way simpler than memorizing obtuse, non-obvious abbreviations which you need a different one for every form, of every task.

                  ObsolesceO 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • ObsolesceO
                    Obsolesce @scottalanmiller
                    last edited by

                    @scottalanmiller said in Managing Windows Local Users with PowerShell:

                    @Obsolesce said in Managing Windows Local Users with PowerShell:

                    Get-LocalUser salty #PowerShell - Simple, pretty output you can do something with
                    id sally #BASH - simple command, nasty output!

                    You are mentioning BASH, but using "id". You are mixing what is the shell and what is a tool, this is what we were talking about in the other thread. You have to really understand when you are using a shell and when you are not to make useful comparisons.

                    But the info here isn't uniform. In one case you use /etc/passwd and in another you are looking for a tool. Why switch?

                    If you want basic info, just grep username /etc/passwd. Super simple (and standard... this is the biggest thing in Linux, same format over and over, not a unique tool for every task like PowerShell.)

                    If you want more info, yes use the insanely simple and easy to read id command. Which you say has "nasty output", but compare to PowerShell. Short, simpler, and couldn't be easier to read. The PowerShell is fine, but way more verbose.

                    Your bias is showing, there was no reason to post a comparison here, this is a thread about Windows Systems Management. But it does show just how extremely ridiculous PowerShell is, and the lengths that are necessary to make it seem reasonable.

                    Memorizing several different commands are another set of "well known" crazy little abbreviations that are dangerous if you can't memorize millions of them.

                    And you conveniently left out that almost no Windows has this PowerShell stuff, it's non-standard! Only extremely current versions have this without having to go through hoops to install it extra. This isn't universally workable for PowerShell.

                    Way to strawman there...

                    scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • scottalanmillerS
                      scottalanmiller @Obsolesce
                      last edited by

                      @Obsolesce said in Managing Windows Local Users with PowerShell:

                      Yeah but who wants to look at a list of like 50 system users before finding what they are really after. And the output is ugly AF tbh.

                      You are struggling hard to make something really easy seem hard. Yes, it lists all of the users, not just some. Would you really want a list of only some users? Which ones?

                      ObsolesceO 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • scottalanmillerS
                        scottalanmiller @Obsolesce
                        last edited by

                        @Obsolesce said in Managing Windows Local Users with PowerShell:

                        @scottalanmiller said in Managing Windows Local Users with PowerShell:

                        @Obsolesce said in Managing Windows Local Users with PowerShell:

                        Get-LocalUser salty #PowerShell - Simple, pretty output you can do something with
                        id sally #BASH - simple command, nasty output!

                        You are mentioning BASH, but using "id". You are mixing what is the shell and what is a tool, this is what we were talking about in the other thread. You have to really understand when you are using a shell and when you are not to make useful comparisons.

                        But the info here isn't uniform. In one case you use /etc/passwd and in another you are looking for a tool. Why switch?

                        If you want basic info, just grep username /etc/passwd. Super simple (and standard... this is the biggest thing in Linux, same format over and over, not a unique tool for every task like PowerShell.)

                        If you want more info, yes use the insanely simple and easy to read id command. Which you say has "nasty output", but compare to PowerShell. Short, simpler, and couldn't be easier to read. The PowerShell is fine, but way more verbose.

                        Your bias is showing, there was no reason to post a comparison here, this is a thread about Windows Systems Management. But it does show just how extremely ridiculous PowerShell is, and the lengths that are necessary to make it seem reasonable.

                        Memorizing several different commands are another set of "well known" crazy little abbreviations that are dangerous if you can't memorize millions of them.

                        And you conveniently left out that almost no Windows has this PowerShell stuff, it's non-standard! Only extremely current versions have this without having to go through hoops to install it extra. This isn't universally workable for PowerShell.

                        Way to strawman there...

                        My point was... you are coming up with hard ways to do things, when easy ones exist. And your examples show a way harder process in PowerShell.

                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • scottalanmillerS
                          scottalanmiller
                          last edited by

                          In both PowerShell and BASH/useradd you can do a user creation in a single line. It's not pretty and uses a single procedure in both. I don't know the PS version, but this is the BASH version. PS is very similar, though, just different strong commands.

                          useradd  -p $(echo mysecret | openssl passwd -1 -stdin) sally
                          
                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • WrCombsW
                            WrCombs
                            last edited by

                            Hey sorry to interrupt.
                            Why was I tagged in this?
                            just curious /

                            scottalanmillerS 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • scottalanmillerS
                              scottalanmiller @WrCombs
                              last edited by

                              @WrCombs said in Comparing PowerShell to Linux User Manipulation:

                              Hey sorry to interrupt.
                              Why was I tagged in this?
                              just curious /

                              Because he branched off of a question you had initially asked about "how would this look in Linux". But went way off on a tangent, so it was forked.

                              WrCombsW 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • scottalanmillerS
                                scottalanmiller @WrCombs
                                last edited by

                                @WrCombs said in Comparing PowerShell to Linux User Manipulation:

                                Hey sorry to interrupt.
                                Why was I tagged in this?
                                just curious /

                                If you look at the bottom of the OP, he tagged you to show you that the New-LocalUser command will prompt for an interactive password after you run it if you don't do anything else, but that was in my original post already, so not sure why it was mentioned.

                                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                • WrCombsW
                                  WrCombs @scottalanmiller
                                  last edited by

                                  @scottalanmiller said in Comparing PowerShell to Linux User Manipulation:

                                  @WrCombs said in Comparing PowerShell to Linux User Manipulation:

                                  Hey sorry to interrupt.
                                  Why was I tagged in this?
                                  just curious /

                                  Because he branched off of a question you had initially asked about "how would this look in Linux". But went way off on a tangent, so it was forked.

                                  Ah, Thanks.
                                  Yeah i was just curious how the two syntaxs were different Because @StuartJordan (i think )
                                  said "using Bash" instead of Using Linux CLI to do the same thing as powershell looked better. I remember now .

                                  scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                  • scottalanmillerS
                                    scottalanmiller @WrCombs
                                    last edited by

                                    @WrCombs said in Comparing PowerShell to Linux User Manipulation:

                                    Yeah i was just curious how the two syntaxs were different Because @StuartJordan (i think )
                                    said "using Bash" instead of Using Linux CLI to do the same thing as powershell looked better. I remember now .

                                    It's a little confusing, which Ob alluded to but didn't point out too much and is a valid point that he should have made, is that on the Linux side some of what we are using is Bash, and some of what we are using is user management commands.

                                    This is definitely part of the downside to the Linux approach is that sometimes you have a tool, and sometimes you are manipulating a text file. Both are easy, but they are very different. Of course, technically that is optional, it wasn't that long ago that we didn't use the tools and we just edited the text files. It's not hard, but it is unnecessarily hard and would look pretty foolish today if it was the only approach.

                                    But some tasks don't quite have an alternative, because the text file is so easy. Like Ob's example of "getting all users". You just read the whole table and there it is. But this creates a "half the stuff one way, half the stuff another way" problem which, while each task is easy, isn't consistent. PowerShell makes it all consistent, but all more complicated.

                                    In PS, everything is a unified commandlet, and nothing is "interact with the OS directly." In Linux, there are tools for some tasks, and others you just work with the OS' files. It would be nice to see Linux bridge that gap with a unified management toolset at some point.

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                                    • ObsolesceO
                                      Obsolesce @scottalanmiller
                                      last edited by Obsolesce

                                      @scottalanmiller said in Comparing PowerShell to Linux User Manipulation:

                                      @Obsolesce said in Managing Windows Local Users with PowerShell:

                                      @scottalanmiller said in Managing Windows Local Users with PowerShell:

                                      That simple.

                                      Not as simple as, simply glu.

                                      Actually, it's way simpler than memorizing obtuse, non-obvious abbreviations which you need a different one for every form, of every task.

                                      I personally never use aliases, even though I memorize most of the common ones because they are usually the first letters of each word. I mentioned that for the silly people who are counting command characters. Who gives a shit between the difference of typing New-LocalUser vs adduser + passwd. It's simple enough, and if you are typing those a lot, it's about time you make yourself useful and learn to script and automate.... or change how you manage local users, for example.

                                      scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                      • scottalanmillerS
                                        scottalanmiller @Obsolesce
                                        last edited by

                                        @Obsolesce said in Comparing PowerShell to Linux User Manipulation:

                                        and if you are typing those a lot, it's about time you make yourself useful and learn to script and automate

                                        That's easy to say, but there are tons and tons of people out there who use these all day, every day, but cannot automate because they aren't in a uniform environment. Remember the biggest Windows admin group is MSPs, not "single customer environments" and quite an astounding volume of Windows management by industry percentage is done through tools that require environmental-less remote command execution, use CMD not PS (at least by default), and cannot have newer PS versions, and cannot have an automation toolset of any significance.

                                        I'm sure that there are automation ideas out there even for MSPs. But when you manage thousands of totally disconnected Windows desktops, what is there to automate? Having fast, simple tools that are universally available is about the best that you can do.

                                        ObsolesceO 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                        • ObsolesceO
                                          Obsolesce @scottalanmiller
                                          last edited by

                                          @scottalanmiller said in Comparing PowerShell to Linux User Manipulation:

                                          @Obsolesce said in Comparing PowerShell to Linux User Manipulation:

                                          and if you are typing those a lot, it's about time you make yourself useful and learn to script and automate

                                          That's easy to say, but there are tons and tons of people out there who use these all day, every day, but cannot automate because they aren't in a uniform environment. Remember the biggest Windows admin group is MSPs, not "single customer environments" and quite an astounding volume of Windows management by industry percentage is done through tools that require environmental-less remote command execution, use CMD not PS (at least by default), and cannot have newer PS versions, and cannot have an automation toolset of any significance.

                                          I'm sure that there are automation ideas out there even for MSPs. But when you manage thousands of totally disconnected Windows desktops, what is there to automate? Having fast, simple tools that are universally available is about the best that you can do.

                                          If they are mostly all managing local users, no usable PowerShell, no automation, etc, then why are they using Windows in the first place?

                                          scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                          • scottalanmillerS
                                            scottalanmiller @Obsolesce
                                            last edited by

                                            @Obsolesce said in Comparing PowerShell to Linux User Manipulation:

                                            If they are mostly all managing local users, no usable PowerShell, no automation, etc, then why are they using Windows in the first place?

                                            None of those are reasons why people choose Windows. People choose Windows primarily because of app compatibility or familiarity with the GUI environment for end users. If IT alone chose an OS for their own purposes, Windows would never be considered at all, it just doesn't make sense in that way (nor does choosing something in that way.) In fact, MS automation has always been a weak point, so if anything, lacking an ability or need for automation would make the argument for choosing Windows stronger, not weaker.

                                            But you are also defining PowerShell as "usable" based on extremely new versions. Maybe this is true, but keep in mind that your argument basically is that PowerShell has been a failure for a decade.

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