36
Check-VMwareTools.ps1
Normal file
36
Check-VMwareTools.ps1
Normal file
@@ -0,0 +1,36 @@
|
||||
function Check-Tools {
|
||||
<#
|
||||
.NOTES
|
||||
===========================================================================
|
||||
Created by: Brian Graf
|
||||
Organization: VMware
|
||||
Official Blog: blogs.vmware.com/PowerCLI
|
||||
Personal Blog: www.vtagion.com
|
||||
Twitter: @vBrianGraf
|
||||
===========================================================================
|
||||
.DESCRIPTION
|
||||
This will quickly return all VMs that have VMware Tools out of date
|
||||
Along with the version that it is running
|
||||
.Example
|
||||
Check-Tools -VMs (Get-VM)
|
||||
.Example
|
||||
$SampleVMs = Get-VM "Mgmt*"
|
||||
Check-Tools -VMs $SampleVMs
|
||||
#>
|
||||
[CmdletBinding()]
|
||||
param(
|
||||
[Parameter(Mandatory=$true,
|
||||
ValueFromPipeline=$True,
|
||||
Position=0)]
|
||||
[VMware.VimAutomation.ViCore.Impl.V1.Inventory.InventoryItemImpl[]]
|
||||
$VMs
|
||||
)
|
||||
Process {
|
||||
#foreach ($VM in $VMs) {
|
||||
$OutofDate = $VMs | where {$_.ExtensionData.Guest.ToolsStatus -ne "toolsOk"}
|
||||
$Result = @($OutofDate | select Name,@{Name="ToolsVersion";Expression={$_.ExtensionData.Guest.Toolsversion}})
|
||||
|
||||
$Result
|
||||
}
|
||||
|
||||
}
|
||||
Reference in New Issue
Block a user