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Get-NetAdapter

Tue Jan 29, 2019 10:25 pm

NAME Get-NetAdapter



SYNOPSIS

Gets the basic network adapter properties.





SYNTAX

Get-NetAdapter [[-Name] <String[]>] [-AsJob] [-CimSession <CimSession[]>] [-IncludeHidden] [-Physical] [-ThrottleLimit <Int32>]

[<CommonParameters>]



Get-NetAdapter [-AsJob] [-CimSession <CimSession[]>] [-IncludeHidden] [-Physical] [-ThrottleLimit <Int32>] -InterfaceDescription <String[]>

[<CommonParameters>]



Get-NetAdapter [-AsJob] [-CimSession <CimSession[]>] [-IncludeHidden] [-Physical] [-ThrottleLimit <Int32>] -InterfaceIndex <UInt32[]>

[<CommonParameters>]





DESCRIPTION

The Get-NetAdapter cmdlet gets the basic network adapter properties. By default only visible adapters are returned. To see the common network

adapter properties, pipe the output into the Format-List cmdlet. To see all the properties, pipe the output to the Format-List cmdlet with the

Property parameter specified as the wildcard character "*". This cmdlet supports multiple views. The default view is as a table. To see more

information regarding various network adapter identifiers use the names view using the Format-Table cmdlet with the View parameter specified as

name. To see more information regarding the miniport, device driver, such as driver date or version use the driver view using the Format-Table

cmdlet with the View parameter specified as driver.





PARAMETERS

-AsJob [<SwitchParameter>]

ps_cimcommon_asjob



Required? false

Position? named

Default value

Accept pipeline input? false

Accept wildcard characters? false



-CimSession <CimSession[]>

Runs the cmdlet in a remote session or on a remote computer. Enter a computer name or a session object, such as the output of a New-CimSession

or Get-CimSession cmdlet. The default is the current session on the local computer.



Required? false

Position? named

Default value

Accept pipeline input? false

Accept wildcard characters? false



-IncludeHidden [<SwitchParameter>]

Indicates that the cmdlet includes both visible and hidden network adapters in the operation. By default only visible network adapters are

included. If a wildcard character is used in identifying a network adapter and this parameter has been specified, then the wildcard string is

matched against both hidden and visible network adapters.



Required? false

Position? named

Default value

Accept pipeline input? false

Accept wildcard characters? false



-InterfaceDescription <String[]>

Specifies an array of network adapter interface descriptions. For a physical network adapter this is typically the name of the vendor of the

network adapter followed by a part number and description, such as Contoso 12345 Gigabit Network Device.



Required? true

Position? named

Default value

Accept pipeline input? true (ByPropertyName)

Accept wildcard characters? true



-InterfaceIndex <UInt32[]>

Specifies the network adapter interface index number as an array.



Required? true

Position? named

Default value

Accept pipeline input? true (ByPropertyName)

Accept wildcard characters? false



-Name <String[]>

Specifies an array of network adapter names.



Required? false

Position? 1

Default value

Accept pipeline input? false

Accept wildcard characters? true



-Physical [<SwitchParameter>]

Indicates that the cmdlet gets all physical network adapters.



Required? false

Position? named

Default value

Accept pipeline input? false

Accept wildcard characters? false



-ThrottleLimit <Int32>

Specifies the maximum number of concurrent operations that can be established to run the cmdlet. If this parameter is omitted or a value of 0

is entered, then Windows PowerShell???? calculates an optimum throttle limit for the cmdlet based on the number of CIM cmdlets that are running

on the computer. The throttle limit applies only to the current cmdlet, not to the session or to the computer.



Required? false

Position? named

Default value

Accept pipeline input? false

Accept wildcard characters? false



<CommonParameters>

This cmdlet supports the common parameters: Verbose, Debug,

ErrorAction, ErrorVariable, WarningAction, WarningVariable,

OutBuffer, PipelineVariable, and OutVariable. For more information, see

about_CommonParameters (http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkID=113216).



INPUTS

None









OUTPUTS

Microsoft.Management.Infrastructure.CimInstance#ROOT/StandardCimv2/NetAdapter



The Microsoft.Management.Infrastructure.CimInstance object is a wrapper class that displays Windows Management Instrumentation (WMI) objects.

The path after the pound sign (#) provides the namespace and class name for the underlying WMI object.





Example 1: Get all visible network adapters



PS C:\\>Get-NetAdapter -Name "*"



This command gets all of the visible network adapters.





Example 2: Get all visible and hidden network adapters



PS C:\\>Get-NetAdapter -Name "*" -IncludeHidden



This command gets all of the network adapters.





Example 3: Get all physical network adapters



PS C:\\>Get-NetAdapter -Name "*" -Physical



This command gets all of the physical network adapters.





Example 4: Get a network adapter by the specified name



PS C:\\>Get-NetAdapter -Name "Ethernet 2"





This command is a version that uses wildcard characters.

PS C:\\>Get-NetAdapter -Name "E*2"



This command gets the network adapter named Ethernet 2.





Example 5: Display the common properties for the specified network adapter



PS C:\\>Get-NetAdapter ????????Name "Ethernet 3" | Format-List ????????Property "*"



This command displays the common properties for the network adapter named Ethernet 3 and formats the list using the Format-List cmdlet.





Example 6: Display all properties for the specified network adapter



PS C:\\>Get-NetAdapter ????????Name "Ethernet 6" | Format-List -Property "*"



This command displays all of the properties for the network adapter named Ethernet 6.





Example 7: Get all network adapters using the interface description that matches a prefix pattern



PS C:\\>Get-NetAdapter -Name "*" -InterfaceDescription "VendorAdapter*"



This command gets all of the network adapters using the interface description that matches the prefix pattern VendorAdapter.





Example 8: Display parameter values for all network adapters



PS C:\\>Get-NetAdapter -Name "*" -IncludeHidden | Format-List -Property "Name", "InterfaceDescription", "InterfaceName"



This command displays the Name, InterfaceDescription, and InterfaceName parameter values for all network adapters.





Example 9: Get the visible network adapters on the specified server



PS C:\\>Get-NetAdapter -Name "*" ????????CimSession "Server5"



This command gets the visible network adapters on the server named Server5. The server named Server5 can be a remote computer.





Example 10: Get the visible network adapters and format the output



PS C:\\>Get-NetAdapter -Name "*" | Format-Table ????????View Driver



This command gets the visible network adapters and formats the output to present driver information.





Example 11: Gets visible network adapters and format the output



PS C:\\>Get-NetAdapter -Name "*" | Format-Table ????????View Name



This command gets the visible network adapters and formats the output to present various names by which a network adapter can be identified such

as the Name, InterfaceDescription, and InterfaceName parameter values.







RELATED LINKS

Online Version:

Disable-NetAdapter

Enable-NetAdapter

Rename-NetAdapter

Restart-NetAdapter

Reset-NetAdapterAdvancedProperty