PowerCLI Reference

Invoke-VMScript

Synopsis

This cmdlet runs a script in the guest OS of each of the specified virtual machines.

Syntax

Invoke-VMScript [-ScriptText] <String> [-VM] <VirtualMachine[]> [-GuestCredential <PSCredential>] [-GuestPassword <SecureString>] [-GuestUser <String>] [-HostCredential <PSCredential>] [-HostPassword <SecureString>] [-HostUser <String>] [-RunAsync] [-ScriptType <ScriptType>] [-Server <VIServer[]>] [-ToolsWaitSecs <Int32>] [-Confirm] [-WhatIf] [<CommonParameters>]

Related Commands

Online Version

Detailed Description

This cmdlet runs a script in the guest OS of each of the specified virtual machines. To run Invoke-VMScript, the user must have read access to the folder containing the virtual machine and a Virtual Machine.Interaction.Console Interaction privilege. The virtual machines must be powered on and have VMware Tools installed. Network connectivity to the ESX system hosting the virtual machine on port 902 must be present. To authenticate with the host or the guest OS, one of the HostUser/HostPassword (GuestUser/GuestPassword) pair and HostCredential (GuestCredential) parameters must be provided. The guest account you use to authenticate with the guest operating system must have administrator's privileges. For a list of supported operating systems, see the PowerCLI User's Guide.


To run this cmdlet against vCenter Server/ESX/ESXi versions earlier than 5.0, you need to meet the following requirements: *You must run the cmdlet on the 32-bit version of Windows PowerShell. *You must have access to the ESX that hosts the virtual machine over TCP port 902. *For vCenter Server/ESX/ESXi versions earlier than 4.1, you need VirtualMachine.Interact.ConsoleInteract privilege. For vCenter Server/ESX/ESXi 4.1 and later, you need VirtualMachine.Interact.GuestControl privilege.


To run this cmdlet against vCenter Server/ESXi 5.0 and later, you need VirtualMachine.GuestOperations.Modify and VirtualMachine.GuestOperations.Execute privileges.

Parameters

NameTypeDescriptionRequired?Pipeline InputDefault Value
ScriptTextStringProvides the text of the script you want to run. You can also pass to this parameter a string variable containing the path to the script.trueFalse
VMVirtualMachine[]Specifies the virtual machines on whose guest operating systems you want to run the script.trueTrue (ByValue)
ConfirmSwitchParameterIf the value is $true, indicates that the cmdlet asks for confirmation before running. If the value is $false, the cmdlet runs without asking for user confirmation.falseFalse
GuestCredentialPSCredentialSpecifies a PSCredential object containing the credentials you want to use for authenticating with the virtual machine guest OS.falseFalse
GuestPasswordSecureStringSpecifies the password you want to use for authenticating with the virtual machine guest OS.falseFalse
GuestUserStringSpecifies the user name you want to use for authenticating with the virtual machine guest OS.falseFalse
HostCredentialPSCredentialSpecifies a PSCredential object containing the credentials you want to use for authenticating with the host. You need to specify host credentials only if the version of the vCenter Server or ESX you are authenticating with is earlier than 4.0, or the VIX version you have installed is earlier than 1.10.falseFalse
HostPasswordSecureStringSpecifies the password you want to use for authenticating with the host. You need to specify host credentials only if the version of the vCenter Server or ESX you are authenticating with is earlier than 4.0, or the VIX version you have installed is earlier than 1.10.falseFalse
HostUserStringSpecifies the user name you want to use for authenticating with the host. You need to specify host credentials only if the version of the vCenter Server or ESX you are authenticating with is earlier than 4.0, or the VIX version you have installed is earlier than 1.10.falseFalse
RunAsyncSwitchParameterIndicates that the command returns immediately without waiting for the task to complete. In this mode, the output of the cmdlet is a Task object. For more information about the RunAsync parameter run "help About_RunAsync" in the VMware PowerCLI console.falseFalse
ScriptTypeScriptTypeSpecifies the type of the script. The valid values are PowerShell, Bat, and Bash. If the virtual machine OS is Windows, the default value is PowerShell. If the virtual machine OS is Linux, the default value is Bash.falseFalse
ServerVIServer[]Specifies the vCenter Server systems on which you want to run the cmdlet. If no value is passed to this parameter, the command runs on the default servers. For more information about default servers, see the description of Connect-VIServer.falseFalse
ToolsWaitSecsInt32Specifies how long in seconds the system waits for connecting to the VMware Tools. The default value is 20.falseFalse
WhatIfSwitchParameterIndicates that the cmdlet is run only to display the changes that would be made and actually no objects are modified.falseFalse

Return Type

One or more VMScriptResult objectsVMScriptResult

Notes

To make PowerShell scripts work, you must restart the virtual machine after the PowerShell installation. For BIN and BASH scripts, restart is not needed.

Examples

-------------------------- Example 1 --------------------------

Invoke-VMScript -VM VM -ScriptText "dir" -GuestUser administrator -GuestPassword pass2

Lists the directory entries on the guest OS.

-------------------------- Example 2 --------------------------

$script = '&"$env:ProgramFiles\Common Files\Microsoft Shared\MSInfo\msinfo32.exe" /report "$env:Tmp\inforeport"'

Invoke-VMScript -ScriptText $script -VM VM -GuestCredential $guestCredential

Runs a PowerShell script. In PowerShell, to access environment variables, you must use the following syntax: $env:<environment variable> (for example, $env:ProgramFiles). Also, to run the program, you must specify an ampersand (&) in front of the program path. The outer quotes ($script = '...') are required because this is how you define a string variable in PowerShell. The inner double quotes are required because there are spaces in the path.

-------------------------- Example 3 --------------------------

$script = '"%programfiles%\Common Files\Microsoft Shared\MSInfo\msinfo32.exe" /report "%tmp%\inforeport"'

Invoke-VMScript -ScriptText $script -VM VM -GuestCredential $guestCredential -ScriptType Bat

Runs a BAT script. In BAT scripts, to access environment variables, you must use the following syntax: %<environment variable>% (for example, %programfiles%).


The outer quotes ($script = '...') are required because this is how you define a string variable in PowerShell. The inner double quotes are required because there are spaces in the path.


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