Chapter 25. System Services
Introduction
As the support mechanism for many administrative tasks on Windows, managing and working with system services naturally fits into the administrator’s toolbox.
PowerShell offers a handful of cmdlets to help make working with system services easier: from listing services to lifecycle management and even to service installation.
List All Running Services
Problem
You want to see which services are running on the system.
Solution
To list all running services, use the Get-Service cmdlet:
PS > Get-Service Status Name DisplayName ------ ---- ----------- Running ADAM_Test Test Stopped Alerter Alerter Running ALG Application Layer Gateway Service Stopped AppMgmt Application Management Stopped aspnet_state ASP.NET State Service Running AudioSrv Windows Audio Running BITS Background Intelligent Transfer Ser... Running Browser Computer Browser (...)
Discussion
The Get-Service cmdlet
retrieves information about all services running on the system. Because
these are rich .NET objects (of the type
System.ServiceProcess.ServiceController), you can apply advanced
filters and operations to make managing services straightforward.
For example, to find all running services:
PS > Get-Service | Where-Object { $_.Status -eq "Running" } Status Name DisplayName ------ ---- ----------- Running ADAM_Test Test Running ALG Application Layer Gateway Service Running AudioSrv Windows Audio Running BITS Background Intelligent Transfer Ser... Running Browser Computer Browser Running COMSysApp ...Become an O’Reilly member and get unlimited access to this title plus top books and audiobooks from O’Reilly and nearly 200 top publishers, thousands of courses curated by job role, 150+ live events each month,
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