Summary: Microsoft Scripting Guy, Ed Wilson, talks about why you should learn Windows PowerShell.
Microsoft Scripting Guy, Ed Wilson, is here. The other day, I ran into an IT pro at the mall. He recognized me and started talking to me. It was like, dude, I was trapped. It turned out that he was cool, and yapping with him was much more fun than walking around a boring mall. Although, this particular mall happens to have a Microsoft Store in it (which incidentally is why the Scripting Wife and I made the trek downtown). Hmm, come to think of it, that might also be why there happened to be an IT pro hanging around. Anyway, he asked me a question that I have taken for granted for a number of years. In fact, I was actually a bit shocked that an IT pro would even ask this question today. But it turned out to be a good experience.
Basically, he said that at work he is swamped. Really swamped. Over the past several years, their staff has literally been cut in half, but the number of servers per staff member has nearly tripled. It is working him to death. Basically, he said that he does not have time to learn Windows PowerShell. Their training budgets disappeared years ago, and there is no time off to attend free events at the Microsoft Office. There is no lab at work, so if he was to learn anything new, it has to be on his own time, at home, using whatever equipment he happens to have on hand.
When I asked him how they managed their environment at work, he told me it was basically a hodge-podge of things cobbled together over the years. Many of their solutionswere created by people who are no longer with the company, or by people who no longer have time to manage the solutionthat was created. This is because they now have new positions or so many additional responsibilities, that they have no time to fix or modify whatever was created so many years ago. Therefore, when something breaks, there is basically no one to fix it. They spend most of their time in break/fix mode, and they move from crisis to crisis.
When I asked him why he remained at the company, he told me that he felt he was lucky to have a job. As a matter of a fact, he had been looking for a new position, but his skills were pretty much out of date (they still have some NT 4.0 servers in production).
So, I told him he needed to learn Windows PowerShell. Surprisingly, he asked, “Why?”
And then I told him. Here are some of the main points I made.
Top five reasons for learning Windows PowerShell
1. It will save time.
Big time. Here is a prediction: For every hour, you spend learning Windows PowerShell, in the course of a single year, you will realize a two-fold return on the investment in your time. This value increases exponentially with the size of your network and the number of servers for which you are responsible. Note: I made this up, and there is no implied guarantee associated with this. But the numbers are also based on hundreds of conversations I have had with IT pros over the years.
Consider the following real world scenario:
You have no automation in place, and you need to create 50 new users in Active Directory. By using the graphical tools, it takes a minimum of 30 seconds per user. That is 25 hours of boring, error-prone work. But even a novice can create and run a script to create all 50 users in less than two hours. For the sake of argument, let’s say it takes five hours to research, create, and test the script. That one script still saves 20 hours of work—a tenfold payback with the very first use. And the next time another 50 users need to be created, it will take much less time to simply modify the script and run it anew.
2. It is less error prone.
As I alluded to in point number 1, it is less error prone. I don’t know about you, but I still remember a time when I was using Active Directory Users and Computers at a customer site (14 years ago). It was about 2:00 A.M. and I had been working for over 18 hours straight. I dozed off with the mouse in my hand. That was when I first learned that Microsoft had put drag-and-drop in Active Directory Users and Computers. Dude, I was panic stricken as I tried for the next several hours to find and to confirm everything that I had inadvertently moved.
If I had of written a Windows PowerShell script, a mistake like that would not have occurred. How many user names have you ever seen in Active Directory that were all lower-case, some that were first initial only, and every other possible combination of entry? How many streets are abbreviated, and how many are spelled out? Is it One Times Square, one times sq, or 1 x sq? Or is it all of these?
3. It is self-documenting.
Even if I mess up in a script, I at least know exactly what happened because my script becomes my change control. The script itself is what was done. Even when working interactively from the Windows PowerShell console, I can turn on logging. Therefore, I have a record of what was typed and what the outcome of the command was.
4. It is the Microsoft standard for automation.
Everything has Windows PowerShell in it. It is the standard for Microsoft automation. This means that I can use Windows PowerShell for Exchange Server, for SQL Server, for SharePoint, for Windows Server, for Hyper-V, for Office 365, for Azure, and so on. If I want to automate processes, configuration, maintenance, and other daily activities, Windows PowerShell is the way to go.
5. Everything you learn applies to everything else.
PowerShell is PowerShell is PowerShell. Everywhere, it the same. This means that if I use Windows PowerShell to administer Active Directory, I can also apply that knowledge to administering Exchange Server. When I learn Windows PowerShell conventions, I can sense how it will work on other products.
But that is not all because the Windows PowerShell team respects the effort you spend in learning Windows PowerShell. What I learned about Windows PowerShell 1.0 applies equally well to Windows PowerShell 4.0, and this knowledge will also provide me with a good stead when the next version comes out.
It is not like having to forget everything I learned last year to work with this year’s version of the product. There may be improvements, shortcuts, and new features, but the old ways continue to work. I have scripts that I wrote in the beta of Windows PowerShell 1.0 and they still work today.
There are many other reasons for learning Windows PowerShell, such as interaction with a great community of fellow scripters, and the fact that Windows PowerShell is just plain fun. If you become addicted to Windows PowerShell, you might even begin talking in Windows PowerShell code. I remember one time when someone asked someone else how they were doing that day, and they replied, “Dollar sign wonderful.” I am not naming names, mind you—but that actually happened, and there were witnesses!
I hope you have an awesome day.
I invite you to follow me on Twitter and Facebook. If you have any questions, send email to me at scripter@microsoft.com, or post your questions on the Official Scripting Guys Forum. See you tomorrow. Until then, peace.
Ed Wilson, Microsoft Scripting Guy