Difference between revisions of "Command Line"

From Max's Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
 
(26 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
 
__FORCETOC__
 
__FORCETOC__
 +
==Uninstall an Application or Program Remotely==
  
=='''Uninstalling Programs/Applications Remotely'''==
+
===Remove:===
  
==='''Java (Nobody Likes Java):'''===
+
runas /user:admin@DOMAIN cmd
 +
wmic
 +
/node:"%COMPUTERNAME%" product get name,version,vendor
 +
/node:"%COMPUTERNAME%" product where name="Adobe Acrobat XI Pro"
 +
/node:'%COMPUTERNAME%' product where name="Adobe Acrobat XI Pro" call uninstall /nointeractive
  
Uninstall Java 64Bit
+
==Install:==
 +
copy %COMPUTERNAME% "\\servername\software\AdbeRdr11000_mui_Std" "C:\IT-DATA"
 +
psexec %COMPUTERNAME% msiexec /i "C:\IT-DATA\AdbeRdr11000_mui_Std\AcroRead.msi" EULA_ACCEPT=YES REMOVE_PREVIOUS=YES /quiet /norestart
 +
''[http://community.spiceworks.com/how_to/179-using-a-command-line-to-uninstall-software-on-remote-pcs Source]''
  
psexec \\computer msiexec /qn /X{26A24AE4-039D-4CA4-87B4-2F86418071F0} /norestart
+
==Install MSI Remotely==
 +
psexec -s \\COMPUTERNAME msiexec /i \\PATHTOMSI.msi /qn
  
==='''Install Java (Why would you do this?):'''===
+
==WMIC==
 +
===View Security Identifier (SID)===
 +
wmic useraccount get name,sid
  
/i "\\LOCATIONANDPATHOFEXE\jre-8u71-windows-i586.exe" INSTALL_SILENT=1 REBOOT=0
+
===View Current Logged On User===
 +
wmic /node:"COMPUTERNAME" computersystem get username
  
 +
===View Serial Number===
 +
wmic /node: "COMPUTERNAME" SystemEnclosure get SerialNumber
 +
wmic /node: "WOMPUTERNAME" BIOS get SerialNumber
  
=='''''Uninstall Remotely'''''==
+
==View Motherboard Manufacturer, Product, Serial Number==
 +
wmic baseboard get product,Manufacturer,version,serialnumber
  
==='''Remove:'''===
+
==View BIOS Version==
 +
wmic bios get smbiosbiosversion
  
runas /user:admin@DOMAIN cmd
+
===View Installed RAM===
  
wmic
+
wmic MEMORYCHIP get BankLabel,DeviceLocator,Capacity,Speed
  
/node:"%COMPUTERNAME%" product get name,version,vendor
+
===View Remote Registry===
 +
sc \\computername start remoteregistry start= auto
 +
copy and paste it into notepad
 +
save it as .bat
  
/node:"%COMPUTERNAME%" product where name="Adobe Acrobat XI Pro"
+
===View System Uptime===
 
+
systeminfo | find "Time"
/node:'%COMPUTERNAME%' product where name="Adobe Acrobat XI Pro" call uninstall /nointeractive
 
 
 
=='''Install:'''==
 
 
 
copy %COMPUTERNAME% "\\servername\software\AdbeRdr11000_mui_Std" "C:\IT-DATA"
 
 
 
psexec %COMPUTERNAME% msiexec /i "C:\IT-DATA\AdbeRdr11000_mui_Std\AcroRead.msi" EULA_ACCEPT=YES REMOVE_PREVIOUS=YES /quiet /norestart
 
 
 
http://community.spiceworks.com/how_to/179-using-a-command-line-to-uninstall-software-on-remote-pcs
 

Latest revision as of 16:48, 14 August 2017

Uninstall an Application or Program Remotely

Remove:

runas /user:admin@DOMAIN cmd
wmic
/node:"%COMPUTERNAME%" product get name,version,vendor
/node:"%COMPUTERNAME%" product where name="Adobe Acrobat XI Pro"
/node:'%COMPUTERNAME%' product where name="Adobe Acrobat XI Pro" call uninstall /nointeractive

Install:

copy %COMPUTERNAME% "\\servername\software\AdbeRdr11000_mui_Std" "C:\IT-DATA"
psexec %COMPUTERNAME% msiexec /i "C:\IT-DATA\AdbeRdr11000_mui_Std\AcroRead.msi" EULA_ACCEPT=YES REMOVE_PREVIOUS=YES /quiet /norestart

Source

Install MSI Remotely

psexec -s \\COMPUTERNAME msiexec /i \\PATHTOMSI.msi /qn

WMIC

View Security Identifier (SID)

wmic useraccount get name,sid

View Current Logged On User

wmic /node:"COMPUTERNAME" computersystem get username

View Serial Number

wmic /node: "COMPUTERNAME" SystemEnclosure get SerialNumber 
wmic /node: "WOMPUTERNAME" BIOS get SerialNumber

View Motherboard Manufacturer, Product, Serial Number

wmic baseboard get product,Manufacturer,version,serialnumber

View BIOS Version

wmic bios get smbiosbiosversion

View Installed RAM

wmic MEMORYCHIP get BankLabel,DeviceLocator,Capacity,Speed

View Remote Registry

sc \\computername start remoteregistry start= auto
copy and paste it into notepad
save it as .bat

View System Uptime

systeminfo | find "Time"