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    Comparing PowerShell to Linux User Manipulation

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    • scottalanmillerS
      scottalanmiller @1337
      last edited by

      @Pete-S said in Comparing PowerShell to Linux User Manipulation:

      It's because the tools aren't linux, it's GNU. Gnu is Not linUx.

      Not GNU. The tools predate Gnu. Gnu remade many of them and they are often used across some of those groups, like Linux and BSD, but rarely in others like AIX.

      It's more of just standards.

      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • JaredBuschJ
        JaredBusch @scottalanmiller
        last edited by

        @scottalanmiller said in Comparing PowerShell to Linux User Manipulation:

        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.

        WTF? What version of Windows are you claiming here? Because PowerShell has been install by default since Windows 7 (PowerShell version 2.0).

        F scottalanmillerS 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • JaredBuschJ
          JaredBusch @Obsolesce
          last edited by

          @Obsolesce said in Comparing PowerShell to Linux User Manipulation:

          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

          WTF? Insecure? Are you fucking stupid?

          Also the correct syntax is passwd salty and guess what, it prompts you to enter the password.

          How about that, it is not any different between the two systems.

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

            @Obsolesce said in Comparing PowerShell to Linux User Manipulation:

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

            As @scottalanmiller already stated, you don't even know what you are trying to compare here as you, again, used incorrect syntax.

            grep salty /etc/passwd

            Real life results from my laptop. Simple colon delimited output.

            [jbusch@lt-jared ~]$ grep jbusch /etc/passwd
            jbusch:x:1103:1103:Jared Busch:/home/jbusch:/bin/bash
            [jbusch@lt-jared ~]$ 
            
            ObsolesceO 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
            • F
              flaxking @JaredBusch
              last edited by

              @JaredBusch said in Comparing PowerShell to Linux User Manipulation:

              @scottalanmiller said in Comparing PowerShell to Linux User Manipulation:

              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.

              WTF? What version of Windows are you claiming here? Because PowerShell has been install by default since Windows 7 (PowerShell version 2.0).

              And Powershell 2.0 is missing a lot of stuff that are taken for granted by Powershell users today. If WMF was made available through Windows updates, that would have made life easier.

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

                @JaredBusch said in Comparing PowerShell to Linux User Manipulation:

                @scottalanmiller said in Comparing PowerShell to Linux User Manipulation:

                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.

                WTF? What version of Windows are you claiming here? Because PowerShell has been install by default since Windows 7 (PowerShell version 2.0).

                Who said PowerShell wasn't there? The mistake is thinking that PowerShell does any of the work, it doesn't. CmdLets do. And the CmdLets that do the work aren't part of the PowerShell packages on Windows 7. You can add them manually, just like you can add different versions of PowerShell. But the PS and PS ecosystem that are part of Windows 7 lack the functionality being discussed, like user and group management. You can write really obtuse, lengthy code to do it, but it is absurd and totally impractical.

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

                  @flaxking said in Comparing PowerShell to Linux User Manipulation:

                  @JaredBusch said in Comparing PowerShell to Linux User Manipulation:

                  @scottalanmiller said in Comparing PowerShell to Linux User Manipulation:

                  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.

                  WTF? What version of Windows are you claiming here? Because PowerShell has been install by default since Windows 7 (PowerShell version 2.0).

                  And Powershell 2.0 is missing a lot of stuff that are taken for granted by Powershell users today. If WMF was made available through Windows updates, that would have made life easier.

                  Exactly. PS on Windows 7 basically requires that you either: add in lots of extra stuff that isn't native, use PS in a totally useless way just to prove a point, or fall back to traditional tools called through PS like the net commands. PS was functional in Windows 7 the same way that CMD was functional there... which is to say moderately, but not fully.

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

                    @JaredBusch said in Comparing PowerShell to Linux User Manipulation:

                    @Obsolesce said in Comparing PowerShell to Linux User Manipulation:

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

                    As @scottalanmiller already stated, you don't even know what you are trying to compare here as you, again, used incorrect syntax.

                    grep salty /etc/passwd

                    Real life results from my laptop. Simple colon delimited output.

                    [jbusch@lt-jared ~]$ grep jbusch /etc/passwd
                    jbusch:x:1103:1103:Jared Busch:/home/jbusch:/bin/bash
                    [jbusch@lt-jared ~]$ 
                    

                    That's listing a single user, the context was listing all local users.

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

                      @JaredBusch said in Comparing PowerShell to Linux User Manipulation:

                      @Obsolesce said in Comparing PowerShell to Linux User Manipulation:

                      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

                      WTF? Insecure? Are you fucking stupid?

                      Also the correct syntax is passwd salty and guess what, it prompts you to enter the password.

                      How about that, it is not any different between the two systems.

                      Shit yeah I did know that.

                      Still, it's two commands, versus one with PowerShell, unless you write a long one-liner in BASH.

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

                        @Obsolesce said in Comparing PowerShell to Linux User Manipulation:

                        @JaredBusch said in Comparing PowerShell to Linux User Manipulation:

                        @Obsolesce said in Comparing PowerShell to Linux User Manipulation:

                        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

                        WTF? Insecure? Are you fucking stupid?

                        Also the correct syntax is passwd salty and guess what, it prompts you to enter the password.

                        How about that, it is not any different between the two systems.

                        Shit yeah I did know that.

                        Still, it's two commands, versus one with PowerShell, unless you write a long one-liner in BASH.

                        Yes, still two commands. Although the PS one is interactive. Which still sucks, too. In this case, PS is slightly better, I feel, but net user beats either.

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                        • ObsolesceO
                          Obsolesce
                          last edited by

                          Screenshot_20190421-180851_ReadEra.jpg

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

                            Screenshot_20190421-182000_ReadEra.jpg

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

                              Understood, Windows is basically crazy complex and non-standard even within itself and needs special tooling to get to where Linux is out of the box 😉 The simple answer is, the best tooling in the world will never fix the underlying complexities baked into the Windows product line and PowerShell is an attempt to make the best of a less than ideal situation. Whereas on Linux the approach has been to take a standard approach whenever possible allowing generic tools to be elegant and effective.

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

                                Objects certainly have advantages, but text has some whopping advantages, too. Like "what you see is real" rather than "what you see is a representation." It's amazing how much power not abstracting the basic configuration away from the admin provides. Yes, it can make getting specific output parsed a little harder in some cases, but means that the data provided is always parsable. Windows relies on special tools for every task, and if those tools aren't made or have issues, tough. With text interfaces, those problems don't really exist.

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                                • ObsolesceO
                                  Obsolesce @scottalanmiller
                                  last edited by

                                  @scottalanmiller said in Comparing PowerShell to Linux User Manipulation:

                                  Understood, Windows is basically crazy complex and non-standard even within itself and needs special tooling to get to where Linux is out of the box 😉 The simple answer is, the best tooling in the world will never fix the underlying complexities baked into the Windows product line and PowerShell is an attempt to make the best of a less than ideal situation. Whereas on Linux the approach has been to take a standard approach whenever possible allowing generic tools to be elegant and effective.

                                  Exactly.

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

                                    @Obsolesce said in Comparing PowerShell to Linux User Manipulation:

                                    @scottalanmiller said in Comparing PowerShell to Linux User Manipulation:

                                    Understood, Windows is basically crazy complex and non-standard even within itself and needs special tooling to get to where Linux is out of the box 😉 The simple answer is, the best tooling in the world will never fix the underlying complexities baked into the Windows product line and PowerShell is an attempt to make the best of a less than ideal situation. Whereas on Linux the approach has been to take a standard approach whenever possible allowing generic tools to be elegant and effective.

                                    Exactly.

                                    This is why comparing PowerShell to CMD is kind of useful, but comparing to BASH is much lessso. When people look at them, then tend to use PowerShell for Windows tasks and BASH for non-Windows tasks. Which makes sense for usage, but no one is actually comparing PS and BASH, they are comparing Windows and Linux tasks.

                                    PS on Linux works the same as on Windows, but isn't very efficient. It can do essentially anything BASH can do, but is generally slower and more difficult. But on Windows, BASH does haven't the interfaces that PS has, so what it does it does really well, but what it doesn't do is pretty big.

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

                                      @scottalanmiller said in Comparing PowerShell to Linux User Manipulation:

                                      This is why comparing PowerShell to CMD is kind of useful, but comparing to BASH is much lessso.

                                      This is why I said from the beginning it's not apples to apples between PoSh and Bash.

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

                                        @Obsolesce said in Comparing PowerShell to Linux User Manipulation:

                                        This is why I said from the beginning it's not apples to apples between PoSh and Bash.

                                        It can be, though. Because there are times where the shells themselves are what we are comparing. And the discussion I had been having originally, was purely about the shells. Things like startup times and reaction times, for which PS is extremely slow compared to Bash. When you put them into an apples to apples mode, just using them to do things like a remote connection or to run a command, PS is extremely slow. When we are comparing their functionality, they are used for generally very different things. But there are absolutely, like what we were initially discussing, when they are identical and the underlying performance differences are very visible.

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                                        • F
                                          flaxking
                                          last edited by

                                          As far as I know, robocopy is still the best file copying/syncing utility included in Windows, and you have to parse the output to get any anything useful back to work with in Powershell.

                                          ^ another example of Windows administration mismatch

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

                                            @flaxking said in Comparing PowerShell to Linux User Manipulation:

                                            As far as I know, robocopy is still the best file copying/syncing utility included in Windows, and you have to parse the output to get any anything useful back to work with in Powershell.

                                            ^ another example of Windows administration mismatch

                                            Interesting, so it outputs in text, not objects? Robocopy is definitely the best, never realized that PS didn't fully integrate.

                                            ObsolesceO 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
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