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Disable-NetIPsecRule
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NAME Disable-NetIPsecRule
SYNOPSIS
Disables an IPsec rule.
SYNTAX
Disable-NetIPsecRule [-All] [-AsJob] [-CimSession <CimSession[]>] [-GPOSession <String>] [-PassThru] [-PolicyStore <String>] [-ThrottleLimit
<Int32>] [-TracePolicyStore] [-Confirm] [-WhatIf] [<CommonParameters>]
Disable-NetIPsecRule [-AllowSetKey <Boolean[]>] [-AllowWatchKey <Boolean[]>] [-AsJob] [-CimSession <CimSession[]>] [-Description <String[]>]
[-DisplayGroup <String[]>] [-Enabled <Enabled[]>] [-EncryptedTunnelBypass <Boolean[]>] [-ForwardPathLifetime <UInt32[]>] [-GPOSession <String>]
[-Group <String[]>] [-InboundSecurity <SecurityPolicy[]>] [-KeyModule <KeyModule[]>] [-Machine <String[]>] [-Mode <IPsecMode[]>]
[-OutboundSecurity <SecurityPolicy[]>] [-PassThru] [-Phase1AuthSet <String[]>] [-Phase2AuthSet <String[]>] [-PolicyStore <String>]
[-PolicyStoreSource <String[]>] [-PolicyStoreSourceType <PolicyStoreType[]>] [-PrimaryStatus <PrimaryStatus[]>] [-QuickModeCryptoSet <String[]>]
[-RemoteTunnelHostname <String[]>] [-RequireAuthorization <Boolean[]>] [-Status <String[]>] [-ThrottleLimit <Int32>] [-TracePolicyStore] [-User
<String[]>] [-Confirm] [-WhatIf] [<CommonParameters>]
Disable-NetIPsecRule [-AsJob] [-CimSession <CimSession[]>] [-PassThru] [-ThrottleLimit <Int32>] -InputObject <CimInstance[]> [-Confirm] [-WhatIf]
[<CommonParameters>]
Disable-NetIPsecRule [-AsJob] [-CimSession <CimSession[]>] [-GPOSession <String>] [-PassThru] [-PolicyStore <String>] [-ThrottleLimit <Int32>]
[-TracePolicyStore] -AssociatedNetIPsecQuickModeCryptoSet <CimInstance> [-Confirm] [-WhatIf] [<CommonParameters>]
Disable-NetIPsecRule [-AsJob] [-CimSession <CimSession[]>] [-GPOSession <String>] [-PassThru] [-PolicyStore <String>] [-ThrottleLimit <Int32>]
[-TracePolicyStore] -AssociatedNetIPsecPhase1AuthSet <CimInstance> [-Confirm] [-WhatIf] [<CommonParameters>]
Disable-NetIPsecRule [-AsJob] [-CimSession <CimSession[]>] [-GPOSession <String>] [-PassThru] [-PolicyStore <String>] [-ThrottleLimit <Int32>]
[-TracePolicyStore] -AssociatedNetIPsecPhase2AuthSet <CimInstance> [-Confirm] [-WhatIf] [<CommonParameters>]
Disable-NetIPsecRule [-AsJob] [-CimSession <CimSession[]>] [-GPOSession <String>] [-PassThru] [-PolicyStore <String>] [-ThrottleLimit <Int32>]
[-TracePolicyStore] -AssociatedNetFirewallProfile <CimInstance> [-Confirm] [-WhatIf] [<CommonParameters>]
Disable-NetIPsecRule [-AsJob] [-CimSession <CimSession[]>] [-GPOSession <String>] [-PassThru] [-PolicyStore <String>] [-ThrottleLimit <Int32>]
[-TracePolicyStore] -AssociatedNetFirewallPortFilter <CimInstance> [-Confirm] [-WhatIf] [<CommonParameters>]
Disable-NetIPsecRule [-AsJob] [-CimSession <CimSession[]>] [-GPOSession <String>] [-PassThru] [-PolicyStore <String>] [-ThrottleLimit <Int32>]
[-TracePolicyStore] -AssociatedNetFirewallInterfaceTypeFilter <CimInstance> [-Confirm] [-WhatIf] [<CommonParameters>]
Disable-NetIPsecRule [-AsJob] [-CimSession <CimSession[]>] [-GPOSession <String>] [-PassThru] [-PolicyStore <String>] [-ThrottleLimit <Int32>]
[-TracePolicyStore] -AssociatedNetFirewallInterfaceFilter <CimInstance> [-Confirm] [-WhatIf] [<CommonParameters>]
Disable-NetIPsecRule [-AsJob] [-CimSession <CimSession[]>] [-GPOSession <String>] [-PassThru] [-PolicyStore <String>] [-ThrottleLimit <Int32>]
[-TracePolicyStore] -AssociatedNetFirewallAddressFilter <CimInstance> [-Confirm] [-WhatIf] [<CommonParameters>]
Disable-NetIPsecRule [-AsJob] [-CimSession <CimSession[]>] [-GPOSession <String>] [-PassThru] [-PolicyStore <String>] [-ThrottleLimit <Int32>]
[-TracePolicyStore] -DisplayName <String[]> [-Confirm] [-WhatIf] [<CommonParameters>]
Disable-NetIPsecRule [-IPsecRuleName] <String[]> [-AsJob] [-CimSession <CimSession[]>] [-GPOSession <String>] [-PassThru] [-PolicyStore <String>]
[-ThrottleLimit <Int32>] [-TracePolicyStore] [-Confirm] [-WhatIf] [<CommonParameters>]
DESCRIPTION
The Disable-NetIPsecRule cmdlet disables a previously enabled IPsec rule to be inactive within the computer or a group policy organizational unit.
A disabled rule will not actively modify computer behavior, but the rule still exists on the computer or in a Group Policy Object (GPO) so it can
be re-enabled. This is different from the Remove-NetIPsecRule which permanently removes the rule.
This cmdlet gets one or more IPsec rules to be disabled with the IPsecRuleName parameter (default), the DisplayName parameter, rule properties, or
by associated filters or objects. The Enabled parameter value for the resulting queried rules is set to False.
Disabling firewall and IPsec rules can be useful for debugging IPsec policy mismatch issues, but is easier when the rules are in the local, or
persistent, store. Disabling rules in a GPO container will not take effect until the next time the client applies the GPO. To troubleshoot
GPO-based IPsec policy, consider copying all the rules, and authorization and cryptographic sets from the GPO to a computer that does not have the
GPO policy applied using the corresponding Copy-NetIPsecRule cmdlets. This is the way to locally modify the policy, in order to troubleshoot any
IPsec failures.
PARAMETERS
-All [<SwitchParameter>]
Indicates that all of the IPsec rules within the specified policy store are disabled.
Required? false
Position? named
Default value
Accept pipeline input? false
Accept wildcard characters? false
-AllowSetKey <Boolean[]>
Indicates that matching IPsec rules of the indicated value are disabled.
This parameter specifies that the IPsec rule allows trusted intermediaries to override keying material. If this parameter is set to True, then
the trusted intermediaries are allowed to manipulate the cryptographic keying material used with an IPsec security association (SA).
It is possible that when this parameter is True at both ends, the computer will perform arbitration through SA negotiation so that one end
sets the key while the other end watches the key. See the AllowWatchKey parameter for more information.
The default value is False.
This parameter is only supported on Windows Server???? 2012.
Required? false
Position? named
Default value
Accept pipeline input? false
Accept wildcard characters? false
-AllowWatchKey <Boolean[]>
Indicates that matching IPsec rules of the indicated value are disabled.
This parameter specifies that the IPsec rule allows trusted intermediaries to provide notification of changes in keying material. If this
parameter is set to True, then the trusted intermediaries are allowed to retrieve the cryptographic keying material associated with an IPsec
security association (SA), and to subscribe for notification of changes.
The default value is False.
This parameter is only supported on Windows Server 2012.
Required? false
Position? named
Default value
Accept pipeline input? false
Accept wildcard characters? false
-AsJob [<SwitchParameter>]
Runs the cmdlet as a background job. Use this parameter to run commands that take a long time to complete.
The cmdlet immediately returns an object that represents the job and then displays the command prompt. You can continue to work in the
session while the job completes. To manage the job, use the *-Job cmdlets. To get the job results, use the Receive-Job cmdlet.
For more information about Windows PowerShell???? background jobs, see about_Jobs.
Required? false
Position? named
Default value
Accept pipeline input? false
Accept wildcard characters? false
-AssociatedNetFirewallAddressFilter <CimInstance>
Gets the IPsec rules that are associated with the given address filter to be disabled.
A NetFirewallAddressFilter object represents the address conditions associated with a rule. See the Get-NetFirewallAddressFilter cmdlet for
more information.
Required? true
Position? named
Default value
Accept pipeline input? True (ByValue)
Accept wildcard characters? false
-AssociatedNetFirewallInterfaceFilter <CimInstance>
Gets the IPsec rules that are associated with the given interface filter to be disabled.
A NetFirewallInterfaceFilter object represents the interface conditions associated with a rule. See the Get-NetFirewallInterfaceFilter cmdlet
for more information.
Required? true
Position? named
Default value
Accept pipeline input? True (ByValue)
Accept wildcard characters? false
-AssociatedNetFirewallInterfaceTypeFilter <CimInstance>
Gets the IPsec rules that are associated with the given interface type filter to be disabled.
A NetFirewallInterfaceTypeFilter object represents the interface conditions associated with a rule. See the Get-NetFirewallInterfaceTypeFilter
cmdlet for more information.
Required? true
Position? named
Default value
Accept pipeline input? True (ByValue)
Accept wildcard characters? false
-AssociatedNetFirewallPortFilter <CimInstance>
Gets the IPsec rules that are associated with the given port filter to be disabled.
A NetFirewallPortFilter object represents the port conditions associated with a rule. See the Get-NetFirewallPortFilter cmdlet for more
information.
Required? true
Position? named
Default value
Accept pipeline input? True (ByValue)
Accept wildcard characters? false
-AssociatedNetFirewallProfile <CimInstance>
Gets the IPsec rules that are associated with the given firewall profile type to be disabled.
A NetFirewallProfile object represents the profile conditions associated with a rule. See the Get-NetFirewallProfile cmdlet for more
information.
Required? true
Position? named
Default value
Accept pipeline input? True (ByValue)
Accept wildcard characters? false
-AssociatedNetIPsecPhase1AuthSet <CimInstance>
Gets the IPsec rules that are associated with the given phase 1 authentication set to be disabled.
A NetIPsecPhase1AuthSet object represents the phase 1 authorization set conditions associated with an IPsec or main mode rule. This parameter
sets the methods for main mode negotiation by describing the proposals for computer authentication. See the Get-NetIPsecPhase1AuthSet cmdlet
for more information.
Alternatively, the Phase1AuthSet parameter can be used for the same purpose, but does not allow the authentication set to be piped into the
cmdlet and the set must be specified with the IPsecRuleName parameter.
Required? true
Position? named
Default value
Accept pipeline input? True (ByValue)
Accept wildcard characters? false
-AssociatedNetIPsecPhase2AuthSet <CimInstance>
Gets the IPsec rules that are associated, via the pileline, with the input phase 2 authentication set to be disabled.
A NetIPsecPhase1AuthSet object represents the phase 2 authorization set conditions associated with a rule. See the Get-NetIPsecPhase2AuthSet
cmdlet for more information.
Alternatively, the Phase2AuthSet parameter can be used for the same purpose, but does not allow the authentication set to be piped into the
cmdlet and the set must be specified with the IPsecRuleName parameter.
Required? true
Position? named
Default value
Accept pipeline input? True (ByValue)
Accept wildcard characters? false
-AssociatedNetIPsecQuickModeCryptoSet <CimInstance>
Gets the IPsec rules that are associated, via the pipeline, with the input quick mode cryptographic set to be disabled.
A NetIPsecQuickModeCryptoSet object represents a quick mode cryptographic set that contains cryptographic proposals. This parameter specifies
parameters for the quick mode negotiation as well as dictating the cryptographic proposals that should be proposed during the exchange. This
is only associated with IPsec rules. See the Get-NetIPsecQuickModeCryptoSet cmdlet for more information.
Alternatively, the QuickModeCryptoSet parameter can be used for the same purpose, but does not allow the cryptographic set to be piped into
the cmdlet and the set must be specified with the IPsecRuleName parameter.
Required? true
Position? named
Default value
Accept pipeline input? True (ByValue)
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
-Description <String[]>
Specifies that matching IPsec rules of the indicated description are disabled. Wildcard characters are accepted.
This parameter provides information about the IPsec rule. This parameter specifies a localized, user-facing description of the object.
Required? false
Position? named
Default value
Accept pipeline input? false
Accept wildcard characters? false
-DisplayGroup <String[]>
Specifies that only matching firewall rules of the indicated group association are disabled. Wildcard characters are accepted.
The Group parameter specifies the source string for this parameter. If the value for this parameter is a localizable string, then the Group
parameter contains an indirect string. Rule groups can be used to organize rules by influence and allows batch rule modifications. Using the
Set-NetIPsecRule cmdlet, if the group name is specified for a set of rules or sets, then all of the rules or sets in that group receive the
same set of modifications. It is good practice to specify the Group parameter value with a universal and world-ready indirect @FirewallAPI
name.
Note: This parameter cannot be specified upon object creation using the New-NetIPsecRule cmdlet, but can be modified using dot-notation and
the Set-NetIPsecRule cmdlet.
Required? false
Position? named
Default value
Accept pipeline input? false
Accept wildcard characters? false
-DisplayName <String[]>
Specifies that only matching IPsec rules of the indicated display name are disabled. Wildcard characters are accepted.
Specifies the localized, user-facing name of the IPsec rule being created. When creating a rule this parameter is required. This parameter
value is locale-dependent. If the object is not modified, this parameter value may change in certain circumstances. When writing scripts in
multi-lingual environments, the IPsecRuleName parameter should be used instead, where the default value is a randomly assigned value. Note:
This parameter cannot be set to All.
Required? true
Position? named
Default value
Accept pipeline input? false
Accept wildcard characters? false
-Enabled <Enabled[]>
Specifies that matching IPsec rules of the indicated state are disabled.
This parameter specifies that the rule object is administratively enabled or administratively disabled. The acceptable values for this
parameter are:
-- True: Specifies the rule is currently enabled.
-- False: Specifies the rule is currently disabled. A disabled rule will not actively modify computer behavior, but the management construct
still exists on the computer so it can be re-enabled.
Required? false
Position? named
Default value
Accept pipeline input? false
Accept wildcard characters? false
-EncryptedTunnelBypass <Boolean[]>
Indicates that matching IPsec rules of the specified value are disabled.
This parameter specifies the encapsulation state for network traffic sent to a tunnel end point that is already IPsec protected. If this
parameter is set to True, then the network traffic sent to a tunnel end point that is already IPsec protected does not have to be encapsulated
again. This option can improve network performance in the case where network traffic that is already end-to-end protected by other IPsec
rules.
The default value is False.
This parameter is only supported on Windows?? Server?????? 2008?? R2 and Windows Server 2012.
Required? false
Position? named
Default value
Accept pipeline input? false
Accept wildcard characters? false
-ForwardPathLifetime <UInt32[]>
Specifies that matching IPsec rules of the specified path lifetime value are disabled.
This parameter specifies the session key lifetime for an IPsec rule, in minutes. The acceptable values for this parameter are: 78 through
172799.
The default value is 0 minutes.
When managing a GPO, the default setting is NotConfigured.
This parameter is only supported on Windows Server 2012.
Required? false
Position? named
Default value
Accept pipeline input? false
Accept wildcard characters? false
-GPOSession <String>
Specifies the network GPO from which to retrieve the rules to be disabled.
This parameter is used in the same way as the PolicyStore parameter. When modifying GPOs in Windows PowerShell????, each change to a GPO requires
the entire GPO to be loaded, modified, and saved back. On a busy Domain Controller (DC), this can be a slow and resource-heavy operation. A
GPO Session loads a domain GPO onto the local computer and makes all changes in a batch, before saving it back. This reduces the load on the
DC and speeds up the Windows PowerShell cmdlets. To load a GPO Session, use the Open-NetGPO cmdlet. To save a GPO Session, use the Save-NetGPO
cmdlet.
Required? false
Position? named
Default value
Accept pipeline input? false
Accept wildcard characters? false
-Group <String[]>
Specifies that only matching IPsec rules of the indicated group association are disabled. Wildcard characters are accepted.
This parameter specifies the source string for the DisplayGroup parameter. If the DisplayGroup parameter value is a localizable string, then
this parameter contains an indirect string. Rule groups can be used to organize rules by influence and allows batch rule modifications. Using
the Set-NetIPsecRule cmdlets, if the group name is specified for a set of rules or sets, then all of the rules or sets in that group receive
the same set of modifications. It is good practice to specify this parameter value with a universal and world-ready indirect @FirewallAPI
name.
Note: The DisplayGroup parameter cannot be specified upon object creation using the New-NetIPsecRule cmdlet, but can be modified using
dot-notation and the Set-NetIPsecRule cmdlet.
Required? false
Position? named
Default value
Accept pipeline input? false
Accept wildcard characters? false
-InboundSecurity <SecurityPolicy[]>
Specifies that matching IPsec rules of the indicated security policy are disabled.
This parameter determines the degree of enforcement for security on inbound traffic.
The acceptable values for this parameter are:??
-- None: No authentication is requested or required for connections that match the rule. It specifies that the local computer does not
attempt authentication for any network connections that match this rule. This option is typically used to grant IPsec exemptions for network
connections that do not need to be protected by IPsec, but would otherwise match other rules that could cause the connection to be dropped.
-- Request: Authentication is requested for connections that match the rule. The local computer attempts to authenticate any inbound network
connections that match this rule, but allows the connection if the authentication attempt is no successful.
-- Require: Authentication is required for connections that match the rule. If the authentication is not successful, then the inbound network
traffic is discarded.
The default value is None.
When the OutboundSecurity parameter is also specified, the following configurations are valid:
InboundSecurity\\OutboundSecurity = None\\None, Request\\None, Request\\Request, Require\\Request, or Require\\Require.
Required? false
Position? named
Default value
Accept pipeline input? false
Accept wildcard characters? false
-InputObject <CimInstance[]>
Specifies the input to this cmdlet. You can use this parameter, or you can pipe the input to this cmdlet.
Required? true
Position? named
Default value
Accept pipeline input? True (ByValue)
Accept wildcard characters? false
-IPsecRuleName <String[]>
Specifies that only matching IPsec rules of the indicated name are disabled. Wildcard characters are accepted.
This parameter acts just like a file name, in that only one rule with a given name may exist in a policy store at a time. During group policy
processing and policy merge, rules that have the same name but come from multiple stores being merged, will overwrite one another so that only
one exists. This overwriting behavior is desirable if the rules serve the same purpose. For instance, all of the firewall rules have specific
names, so if an administrator can copy these rules to a GPO, and the rules will override the local versions on a local computer. GPOs can have
precedence. So if an administrator has a different or more specific rule with the same name in a higher-precedence GPO, then it overrides
other rules that exist. The default value is a randomly assigned value.
When the defaults for main mode encryption need to overridden, specify the customized parameters and set this parameter, making it the new
default setting for encryption.
Required? true
Position? 1
Default value
Accept pipeline input? True (ByPropertyName)
Accept wildcard characters? false
-KeyModule <KeyModule[]>
Specifies that matching IPsec rules of the indicated key module are disabled.
This parameter specifies which keying modules to negotiate.
The acceptable values for this parameter are:?? Default, AuthIP, IKEv1, or IKEv2.
-- Default: Equivalent to both IKEv1 and AuthIP. Required in order for the rule to be applied to computers running Windows versions prior to
Windows Server2008R2.
---- Note: There are authorization and cryptographic methods that are only compatible with certain keying modules. This is a very advanced
setting intended only for specific interoperability scenarios. Overriding this parameter value may result in traffic being sent in plain-text
if the authorization and cryptographic settings are not supported by the keying modules there.
-- AuthIP: Supported with phase 2 authentication.
-- IKEv1: Supported with pre-shared key (PSK), Certificates, and Kerberos.
-- IKEv2: Not supported with Kerberos, PSK, or NT LAN Manager (NTLM).
Note: Windows versions prior to Windows Server 2012 only support the Default configuration.
Required? false
Position? named
Default value
Accept pipeline input? false
Accept wildcard characters? false
-Machine <String[]>
Specifies that matching IPsec rules of the indicated computer accounts are disabled.
This parameter specifies that only network packets that are authenticated as incoming from or outgoing to a computer identified in the list of
computer accounts (SID) match this rule. This parameter value is specified as an SDDL string.
Required? false
Position? named
Default value
Accept pipeline input? false
Accept wildcard characters? false
-Mode <IPsecMode[]>
Specifies that matching IPsec rules of the indicated mode are disabled.
This parameter specifies the type of IPsec mode connection that the IPsec rule defines.
The acceptable values for this parameter are:?? None, Transport, or Tunnel.
The default value is Transport.
Required? false
Position? named
Default value
Accept pipeline input? false
Accept wildcard characters? false
-OutboundSecurity <SecurityPolicy[]>
Specifies that matching IPsec rules of the indicated security policy are disabled.
This parameter determines the degree of enforcement for security on outbound traffic.
The acceptable values for this parameter are:??
-- None: No authentication is requested or required for connections that match the rule. It specifies that the local computer does not
attempt authentication for any network connections that match this rule. This option is typically used to grant IPsec exemptions for network
connections that do not need to be protected by IPsec, but would otherwise match other rules that could cause the connection to be dropped.
-- Request: Authentication is requested for connections that match the rule. The local computer attempts to authenticate any outbound network
connections that match this rule, but allows the connection if the authentication attempt fails.
-- Require: Authentication is required for connections that match the rule. If the authentication is not successful, then the outbound
network traffic is discarded.
The default value is None.
When the InboundSecurity parameter is also specified, the following configurations are valid:
InboundSecurity/OutboundSecurity = None\\None, Request\\None, Request\\Request, Require\\Request, or Require\\Require.
Required? false
Position? named
Default value
Accept pipeline input? false
Accept wildcard characters? false
-PassThru [<SwitchParameter>]
Returns an object representing the item with which you are working. By default, this cmdlet does not generate any output.
Required? false
Position? named
Default value
Accept pipeline input? false
Accept wildcard characters? false
-Phase1AuthSet <String[]>
Gets the IPsec rules that are associated with the given phase 1 authentication set to be disabled.
A NetIPsecPhase1AuthSet object represents the phase 1 authorization set conditions associated with an IPsec or main mode rule. This parameter
sets the methods for main mode negotiation by describing the proposals for computer authentication. See the Get-NetIPsecPhase1AuthSet cmdlet
for more information.
Alternatively, the Phase2AuthSet parameter can be used for the same purpose, but does not allow the authentication set to be piped into the
cmdlet and the set must be specified with the IPsecRuleName parameter.
Required? false
Position? named
Default value
Accept pipeline input? false
Accept wildcard characters? false
-Phase2AuthSet <String[]>
Gets the IPsec rules that are associated with the given phase 2 authentication set to be disabled.
A NetIPsecPhase2AuthSet object represents the phase 2 authorization set conditions associated with an IPsec or main mode rule. This parameter
sets the methods for main mode negotiation by describing the proposals for computer authentication. See the Get-NetIPsecPhase2AuthSet cmdlet
for more information.
Alternatively, the Phase1AuthSet parameter can be used for the same purpose, but does not allow the authentication set to be piped into the
cmdlet and the set must be specified with the IPsecRuleName parameter.
Required? false
Position? named
Default value
Accept pipeline input? false
Accept wildcard characters? false
-PolicyStore <String>
Specifies the policy store from which to retrieve the rules to be disabled.
A policy store is a container for firewall and IPsec policy.
The acceptable values for this parameter are:??
-- PersistentStore: Sometimes called static rules, this store contains the persistent policy for the local computer. This policy is not from
GPOs, and has been created manually or programmatically (during application installation) on the computer. Rules created in this store are
attached to the ActiveStore and activated on the computer immediately.
-- ActiveStore: This store contains the currently active policy, which is the sum of all policy stores that apply to the computer. This is
the resultant set of policy (RSOP) for the local computer (the sum of all GPOs that apply to the computer), and the local stores (the
PersistentStore, the static Windows service hardening (WSH), and the configurable WSH).
---- GPOs are also policy stores. Computer GPOs can be specified as follows.
------ ????????PolicyStore hostname.
---- Active Directory GPOs can be specified as follows.
----- ????????PolicyStore domain.fqdn.com\\GPO_Friendly_Name.
------ Such as the following.
-------- -PolicyStore localhost
-------- -PolicyStore corp.contoso.com\\FirewallPolicy
---- Active Directory GPOs can be created using the New-GPO cmdlet or the Group Policy Management Console.
-- RSOP: This read-only store contains the sum of all GPOs applied to the local computer.
-- SystemDefaults: This read-only store contains the default state of firewall rules that ship with Windows Server 2012.
-- StaticServiceStore: This read-only store contains all the service restrictions that ship with Windows Server 2012. Optional and
product-dependent features are considered part of Windows Server 2012 for the purposes of WFAS.
-- ConfigurableServiceStore: This read-write store contains all the service restrictions that are added for third-party services. In
addition, network isolation rules that are created for Windows Store application containers will appear in this policy store.
The default value is PersistentStore.
Note: The Set-NetIPsecRule cmdlet cannot be used to add an object to a policy store. An object can only be added to a policy store at creation
time with the Copy-NetIPsecRule cmdlet or with the New-NetIPsecRule cmdlet.
Required? false
Position? named
Default value
Accept pipeline input? false
Accept wildcard characters? false
-PolicyStoreSource <String[]>
Specifies that IPsec rules matching the indicated policy store source are disabled.
This parameter contains a path to the policy store where the rule originated if the object is retrieved from the ActiveStore with the
TracePolicyStoreSource option set. This parameter value is automatically generated and should not be modified.
The monitoring output from this parameter is not completely compatible with the PolicyStore parameter. This parameter value cannot always be
passed into the PolicyStore parameter. Domain GPOs are one example in which this parameter contains only the GPO name, not the domain name.
Required? false
Position? named
Default value
Accept pipeline input? false
Accept wildcard characters? false
-PolicyStoreSourceType <PolicyStoreType[]>
Specifies that IPsec rules that match the indicated policy store source type are disabled.
This parameter describes the type of policy store where the rule originated if the object is retrieved from the ActiveStore with the
TracePolicyStoreSource option set. This parameter value is automatically generated and should not be modified.
The acceptable values for this parameter are:??
-- Local: The object originates from the local store.
-- GroupPolicy: The object originates from a GPO.
-- Dynamic: The object originates from the local runtime state. This policy store name is not valid for use in cmdlets, but may appear when
monitoring active policy.
-- Generated: The object was generated automatically. This policy store name is not valid for use in cmdlets, but may appear when monitoring
active policy.
-- Hardcoded: The object was hard-coded. This policy store name is not valid for use in cmdlets, but may appear when monitoring active policy.
Required? false
Position? named
Default value
Accept pipeline input? false
Accept wildcard characters? false
-PrimaryStatus <PrimaryStatus[]>
Specifies that IPsec rules that match the indicated primary status are disabled.
This parameter specifies the overall status of the rule.
-- OK: Specifies that the rule will work as specified.
-- Degraded: Specifies that one or more parts of the rule will not be enforced.
-- Error: Specifies that the computer is unable to use the rule at all.
See the Status and StatusCode fields of the object for more detailed status information.
Required? false
Position? named
Default value
Accept pipeline input? false
Accept wildcard characters? false
-QuickModeCryptoSet <String[]>
Specifies that matching IPsec rules of the specified quick mode cryptographic set are disabled.
This parameter specifies the quick mode cryptographic set to be associated with the IPsec rule.
A NetIPsecMainModeCryptoSet object represents quick mode cryptographic conditions associated with an IPsec rule. This parameter sets the
methods for quick mode negotiation by describing the proposals for encryption. See the New-NetIPsecQuickModeCryptoSet cmdlet for more
information.
Alternatively, the AssociatedNetIPsecQuickModeCryptoSet parameter can be used for the same purpose, but is used to pipe the input set into the
rule.
Note: When specifying cryptographic sets, the IPsecRuleName parameter value of the cryptographic set must be used. The object cannot be
directly passed to this cmdlet.
Required? false
Position? named
Default value
Accept pipeline input? false
Accept wildcard characters? false
-RemoteTunnelHostname <String[]>
Specifies that matching IPsec rules of the specified second end point tunnel host name are disabled.
Specifies a fully qualified DNS name that resolves to a list of remote tunnel end points.
This parameter is only supported on Windows Server 2012.
Note: This parameter can only be used with multiple remote tunnel end points. Specifying this parameter prevents a non-asymmetric tunnel mode
IPsec rule from being created. Rule creation will fail when a single remote tunnel end point and this parameter are specified, or when remote
tunnel end point is Any and this parameter is specified.
Required? false
Position? named
Default value
Accept pipeline input? false
Accept wildcard characters? false
-RequireAuthorization <Boolean[]>
Indicates that matching IPsec rules of the specified value are disabled.
Specifies the given value for an IPsec rule.
If this parameter is set to True, then enforcement of authorization is allowed for end points.
This parameter is only supported on Windows Server?? 2008?? R2 and Windows Server 2012.
Required? false
Position? named
Default value
Accept pipeline input? false
Accept wildcard characters? false
-Status <String[]>
Specifies that IPsec rules that match the indicated status are disabled.
This parameter describes the status message for the specified status code value. The status code is a numerical value that indicates any
syntax, parsing, or runtime errors in the rule or set. This parameter value should not be modified.
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
-TracePolicyStore [<SwitchParameter>]
Specifies that the name of the source GPO is queried and set to the PolicyStoreSource parameter value.
Required? false
Position? named
Default value
Accept pipeline input? false
Accept wildcard characters? false
-User <String[]>
Specifies that matching IPsec rules of the indicated user accounts are disabled.
This parameter specifies that only network packets that are authenticated as incoming from or outgoing to a user identified in the list of
user accounts match this rule. This parameter value is specified as an SDDL string.
Required? false
Position? named
Default value
Accept pipeline input? false
Accept wildcard characters? false
-Confirm [<SwitchParameter>]
Prompts you for confirmation before running the cmdlet.
Required? false
Position? named
Default value false
Accept pipeline input? false
Accept wildcard characters? false
-WhatIf [<SwitchParameter>]
Shows what would happen if the cmdlet runs. The cmdlet is not run.
Required? false
Position? named
Default value false
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
Microsoft.Management.Infrastructure.CimInstance#root\\StandardCimv2\\MSFT_NetAddressFilter
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.
Microsoft.Management.Infrastructure.CimInstance#root\\StandardCimv2\\MSFT_NetConSecRule[]
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.
Microsoft.Management.Infrastructure.CimInstance#root\\StandardCimv2\\MSFT_NetFirewallProfile
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.
Microsoft.Management.Infrastructure.CimInstance#root\\StandardCimv2\\MSFT_NetIKEP1AuthSet
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.
Microsoft.Management.Infrastructure.CimInstance#root\\StandardCimv2\\MSFT_NetIKEP2AuthSet
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.
Microsoft.Management.Infrastructure.CimInstance#root\\StandardCimv2\\MSFT_NetIKEQMCryptoSet
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.
Microsoft.Management.Infrastructure.CimInstance#root\\StandardCimv2\\MSFT_NetInterfaceFilter
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.
Microsoft.Management.Infrastructure.CimInstance#root\\StandardCimv2\\MSFT_NetInterfaceTypeFilter
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.
Microsoft.Management.Infrastructure.CimInstance#root\\StandardCimv2\\MSFT_NetProtocolPortFilter
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.
OUTPUTS
Microsoft.Management.Infrastructure.CimInstance#root\\StandardCimv2\\MSFT_NetConSecRule[]
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
PS C:\\>Disable-NetIPsecRule -DisplayName "Require Outbound Authentication" -PolicyStore domain.contoso.com\\gpo_name
This example disables an IPsec rule in a GPO given the localized name.
EXAMPLE 2
PS C:\\>Disable-NetIPsecRule ????????Group "Ipsec-DirectAccess-Traffic" ????????Mode Transport -PolicyStore ActiveStore
This example disables all transport mode DA rules on the local computer.
EXAMPLE 3
PS C:\\>$phase1AuthSet = Get-NetIPsecPhase1AuthSet ????????DisplayName "Computer Kerb, CA Auth"
PS C:\\>Disable-NetIPsecRule ????????InputObject $phase1AuthSet
This example disables the IPsec rules associated with the specified phase 1 authentication set.
RELATED LINKS
Online Version: http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=225799
Copy-NetIPsecRule
Enable-NetIPsecRule
Get-NetFirewallAddressFilter
Get-NetFirewallInterfaceFilter
Get-NetFirewallInterfaceTypeFilter
Get-NetFirewallPortFilter
Get-NetFirewallProfile
Get-NetIPsecPhase1AuthSet
Get-NetIPsecPhase2AuthSet
Get-NetIPsecQuickModeCryptoSet
Get-NetIPsecRule
New-NetIPsecRule
Open-NetGPO
Remove-NetIPsecRule
Save-NetGPO
Set-NetIPsecRule
New-GPO
SYNOPSIS
Disables an IPsec rule.
SYNTAX
Disable-NetIPsecRule [-All] [-AsJob] [-CimSession <CimSession[]>] [-GPOSession <String>] [-PassThru] [-PolicyStore <String>] [-ThrottleLimit
<Int32>] [-TracePolicyStore] [-Confirm] [-WhatIf] [<CommonParameters>]
Disable-NetIPsecRule [-AllowSetKey <Boolean[]>] [-AllowWatchKey <Boolean[]>] [-AsJob] [-CimSession <CimSession[]>] [-Description <String[]>]
[-DisplayGroup <String[]>] [-Enabled <Enabled[]>] [-EncryptedTunnelBypass <Boolean[]>] [-ForwardPathLifetime <UInt32[]>] [-GPOSession <String>]
[-Group <String[]>] [-InboundSecurity <SecurityPolicy[]>] [-KeyModule <KeyModule[]>] [-Machine <String[]>] [-Mode <IPsecMode[]>]
[-OutboundSecurity <SecurityPolicy[]>] [-PassThru] [-Phase1AuthSet <String[]>] [-Phase2AuthSet <String[]>] [-PolicyStore <String>]
[-PolicyStoreSource <String[]>] [-PolicyStoreSourceType <PolicyStoreType[]>] [-PrimaryStatus <PrimaryStatus[]>] [-QuickModeCryptoSet <String[]>]
[-RemoteTunnelHostname <String[]>] [-RequireAuthorization <Boolean[]>] [-Status <String[]>] [-ThrottleLimit <Int32>] [-TracePolicyStore] [-User
<String[]>] [-Confirm] [-WhatIf] [<CommonParameters>]
Disable-NetIPsecRule [-AsJob] [-CimSession <CimSession[]>] [-PassThru] [-ThrottleLimit <Int32>] -InputObject <CimInstance[]> [-Confirm] [-WhatIf]
[<CommonParameters>]
Disable-NetIPsecRule [-AsJob] [-CimSession <CimSession[]>] [-GPOSession <String>] [-PassThru] [-PolicyStore <String>] [-ThrottleLimit <Int32>]
[-TracePolicyStore] -AssociatedNetIPsecQuickModeCryptoSet <CimInstance> [-Confirm] [-WhatIf] [<CommonParameters>]
Disable-NetIPsecRule [-AsJob] [-CimSession <CimSession[]>] [-GPOSession <String>] [-PassThru] [-PolicyStore <String>] [-ThrottleLimit <Int32>]
[-TracePolicyStore] -AssociatedNetIPsecPhase1AuthSet <CimInstance> [-Confirm] [-WhatIf] [<CommonParameters>]
Disable-NetIPsecRule [-AsJob] [-CimSession <CimSession[]>] [-GPOSession <String>] [-PassThru] [-PolicyStore <String>] [-ThrottleLimit <Int32>]
[-TracePolicyStore] -AssociatedNetIPsecPhase2AuthSet <CimInstance> [-Confirm] [-WhatIf] [<CommonParameters>]
Disable-NetIPsecRule [-AsJob] [-CimSession <CimSession[]>] [-GPOSession <String>] [-PassThru] [-PolicyStore <String>] [-ThrottleLimit <Int32>]
[-TracePolicyStore] -AssociatedNetFirewallProfile <CimInstance> [-Confirm] [-WhatIf] [<CommonParameters>]
Disable-NetIPsecRule [-AsJob] [-CimSession <CimSession[]>] [-GPOSession <String>] [-PassThru] [-PolicyStore <String>] [-ThrottleLimit <Int32>]
[-TracePolicyStore] -AssociatedNetFirewallPortFilter <CimInstance> [-Confirm] [-WhatIf] [<CommonParameters>]
Disable-NetIPsecRule [-AsJob] [-CimSession <CimSession[]>] [-GPOSession <String>] [-PassThru] [-PolicyStore <String>] [-ThrottleLimit <Int32>]
[-TracePolicyStore] -AssociatedNetFirewallInterfaceTypeFilter <CimInstance> [-Confirm] [-WhatIf] [<CommonParameters>]
Disable-NetIPsecRule [-AsJob] [-CimSession <CimSession[]>] [-GPOSession <String>] [-PassThru] [-PolicyStore <String>] [-ThrottleLimit <Int32>]
[-TracePolicyStore] -AssociatedNetFirewallInterfaceFilter <CimInstance> [-Confirm] [-WhatIf] [<CommonParameters>]
Disable-NetIPsecRule [-AsJob] [-CimSession <CimSession[]>] [-GPOSession <String>] [-PassThru] [-PolicyStore <String>] [-ThrottleLimit <Int32>]
[-TracePolicyStore] -AssociatedNetFirewallAddressFilter <CimInstance> [-Confirm] [-WhatIf] [<CommonParameters>]
Disable-NetIPsecRule [-AsJob] [-CimSession <CimSession[]>] [-GPOSession <String>] [-PassThru] [-PolicyStore <String>] [-ThrottleLimit <Int32>]
[-TracePolicyStore] -DisplayName <String[]> [-Confirm] [-WhatIf] [<CommonParameters>]
Disable-NetIPsecRule [-IPsecRuleName] <String[]> [-AsJob] [-CimSession <CimSession[]>] [-GPOSession <String>] [-PassThru] [-PolicyStore <String>]
[-ThrottleLimit <Int32>] [-TracePolicyStore] [-Confirm] [-WhatIf] [<CommonParameters>]
DESCRIPTION
The Disable-NetIPsecRule cmdlet disables a previously enabled IPsec rule to be inactive within the computer or a group policy organizational unit.
A disabled rule will not actively modify computer behavior, but the rule still exists on the computer or in a Group Policy Object (GPO) so it can
be re-enabled. This is different from the Remove-NetIPsecRule which permanently removes the rule.
This cmdlet gets one or more IPsec rules to be disabled with the IPsecRuleName parameter (default), the DisplayName parameter, rule properties, or
by associated filters or objects. The Enabled parameter value for the resulting queried rules is set to False.
Disabling firewall and IPsec rules can be useful for debugging IPsec policy mismatch issues, but is easier when the rules are in the local, or
persistent, store. Disabling rules in a GPO container will not take effect until the next time the client applies the GPO. To troubleshoot
GPO-based IPsec policy, consider copying all the rules, and authorization and cryptographic sets from the GPO to a computer that does not have the
GPO policy applied using the corresponding Copy-NetIPsecRule cmdlets. This is the way to locally modify the policy, in order to troubleshoot any
IPsec failures.
PARAMETERS
-All [<SwitchParameter>]
Indicates that all of the IPsec rules within the specified policy store are disabled.
Required? false
Position? named
Default value
Accept pipeline input? false
Accept wildcard characters? false
-AllowSetKey <Boolean[]>
Indicates that matching IPsec rules of the indicated value are disabled.
This parameter specifies that the IPsec rule allows trusted intermediaries to override keying material. If this parameter is set to True, then
the trusted intermediaries are allowed to manipulate the cryptographic keying material used with an IPsec security association (SA).
It is possible that when this parameter is True at both ends, the computer will perform arbitration through SA negotiation so that one end
sets the key while the other end watches the key. See the AllowWatchKey parameter for more information.
The default value is False.
This parameter is only supported on Windows Server???? 2012.
Required? false
Position? named
Default value
Accept pipeline input? false
Accept wildcard characters? false
-AllowWatchKey <Boolean[]>
Indicates that matching IPsec rules of the indicated value are disabled.
This parameter specifies that the IPsec rule allows trusted intermediaries to provide notification of changes in keying material. If this
parameter is set to True, then the trusted intermediaries are allowed to retrieve the cryptographic keying material associated with an IPsec
security association (SA), and to subscribe for notification of changes.
The default value is False.
This parameter is only supported on Windows Server 2012.
Required? false
Position? named
Default value
Accept pipeline input? false
Accept wildcard characters? false
-AsJob [<SwitchParameter>]
Runs the cmdlet as a background job. Use this parameter to run commands that take a long time to complete.
The cmdlet immediately returns an object that represents the job and then displays the command prompt. You can continue to work in the
session while the job completes. To manage the job, use the *-Job cmdlets. To get the job results, use the Receive-Job cmdlet.
For more information about Windows PowerShell???? background jobs, see about_Jobs.
Required? false
Position? named
Default value
Accept pipeline input? false
Accept wildcard characters? false
-AssociatedNetFirewallAddressFilter <CimInstance>
Gets the IPsec rules that are associated with the given address filter to be disabled.
A NetFirewallAddressFilter object represents the address conditions associated with a rule. See the Get-NetFirewallAddressFilter cmdlet for
more information.
Required? true
Position? named
Default value
Accept pipeline input? True (ByValue)
Accept wildcard characters? false
-AssociatedNetFirewallInterfaceFilter <CimInstance>
Gets the IPsec rules that are associated with the given interface filter to be disabled.
A NetFirewallInterfaceFilter object represents the interface conditions associated with a rule. See the Get-NetFirewallInterfaceFilter cmdlet
for more information.
Required? true
Position? named
Default value
Accept pipeline input? True (ByValue)
Accept wildcard characters? false
-AssociatedNetFirewallInterfaceTypeFilter <CimInstance>
Gets the IPsec rules that are associated with the given interface type filter to be disabled.
A NetFirewallInterfaceTypeFilter object represents the interface conditions associated with a rule. See the Get-NetFirewallInterfaceTypeFilter
cmdlet for more information.
Required? true
Position? named
Default value
Accept pipeline input? True (ByValue)
Accept wildcard characters? false
-AssociatedNetFirewallPortFilter <CimInstance>
Gets the IPsec rules that are associated with the given port filter to be disabled.
A NetFirewallPortFilter object represents the port conditions associated with a rule. See the Get-NetFirewallPortFilter cmdlet for more
information.
Required? true
Position? named
Default value
Accept pipeline input? True (ByValue)
Accept wildcard characters? false
-AssociatedNetFirewallProfile <CimInstance>
Gets the IPsec rules that are associated with the given firewall profile type to be disabled.
A NetFirewallProfile object represents the profile conditions associated with a rule. See the Get-NetFirewallProfile cmdlet for more
information.
Required? true
Position? named
Default value
Accept pipeline input? True (ByValue)
Accept wildcard characters? false
-AssociatedNetIPsecPhase1AuthSet <CimInstance>
Gets the IPsec rules that are associated with the given phase 1 authentication set to be disabled.
A NetIPsecPhase1AuthSet object represents the phase 1 authorization set conditions associated with an IPsec or main mode rule. This parameter
sets the methods for main mode negotiation by describing the proposals for computer authentication. See the Get-NetIPsecPhase1AuthSet cmdlet
for more information.
Alternatively, the Phase1AuthSet parameter can be used for the same purpose, but does not allow the authentication set to be piped into the
cmdlet and the set must be specified with the IPsecRuleName parameter.
Required? true
Position? named
Default value
Accept pipeline input? True (ByValue)
Accept wildcard characters? false
-AssociatedNetIPsecPhase2AuthSet <CimInstance>
Gets the IPsec rules that are associated, via the pileline, with the input phase 2 authentication set to be disabled.
A NetIPsecPhase1AuthSet object represents the phase 2 authorization set conditions associated with a rule. See the Get-NetIPsecPhase2AuthSet
cmdlet for more information.
Alternatively, the Phase2AuthSet parameter can be used for the same purpose, but does not allow the authentication set to be piped into the
cmdlet and the set must be specified with the IPsecRuleName parameter.
Required? true
Position? named
Default value
Accept pipeline input? True (ByValue)
Accept wildcard characters? false
-AssociatedNetIPsecQuickModeCryptoSet <CimInstance>
Gets the IPsec rules that are associated, via the pipeline, with the input quick mode cryptographic set to be disabled.
A NetIPsecQuickModeCryptoSet object represents a quick mode cryptographic set that contains cryptographic proposals. This parameter specifies
parameters for the quick mode negotiation as well as dictating the cryptographic proposals that should be proposed during the exchange. This
is only associated with IPsec rules. See the Get-NetIPsecQuickModeCryptoSet cmdlet for more information.
Alternatively, the QuickModeCryptoSet parameter can be used for the same purpose, but does not allow the cryptographic set to be piped into
the cmdlet and the set must be specified with the IPsecRuleName parameter.
Required? true
Position? named
Default value
Accept pipeline input? True (ByValue)
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
-Description <String[]>
Specifies that matching IPsec rules of the indicated description are disabled. Wildcard characters are accepted.
This parameter provides information about the IPsec rule. This parameter specifies a localized, user-facing description of the object.
Required? false
Position? named
Default value
Accept pipeline input? false
Accept wildcard characters? false
-DisplayGroup <String[]>
Specifies that only matching firewall rules of the indicated group association are disabled. Wildcard characters are accepted.
The Group parameter specifies the source string for this parameter. If the value for this parameter is a localizable string, then the Group
parameter contains an indirect string. Rule groups can be used to organize rules by influence and allows batch rule modifications. Using the
Set-NetIPsecRule cmdlet, if the group name is specified for a set of rules or sets, then all of the rules or sets in that group receive the
same set of modifications. It is good practice to specify the Group parameter value with a universal and world-ready indirect @FirewallAPI
name.
Note: This parameter cannot be specified upon object creation using the New-NetIPsecRule cmdlet, but can be modified using dot-notation and
the Set-NetIPsecRule cmdlet.
Required? false
Position? named
Default value
Accept pipeline input? false
Accept wildcard characters? false
-DisplayName <String[]>
Specifies that only matching IPsec rules of the indicated display name are disabled. Wildcard characters are accepted.
Specifies the localized, user-facing name of the IPsec rule being created. When creating a rule this parameter is required. This parameter
value is locale-dependent. If the object is not modified, this parameter value may change in certain circumstances. When writing scripts in
multi-lingual environments, the IPsecRuleName parameter should be used instead, where the default value is a randomly assigned value. Note:
This parameter cannot be set to All.
Required? true
Position? named
Default value
Accept pipeline input? false
Accept wildcard characters? false
-Enabled <Enabled[]>
Specifies that matching IPsec rules of the indicated state are disabled.
This parameter specifies that the rule object is administratively enabled or administratively disabled. The acceptable values for this
parameter are:
-- True: Specifies the rule is currently enabled.
-- False: Specifies the rule is currently disabled. A disabled rule will not actively modify computer behavior, but the management construct
still exists on the computer so it can be re-enabled.
Required? false
Position? named
Default value
Accept pipeline input? false
Accept wildcard characters? false
-EncryptedTunnelBypass <Boolean[]>
Indicates that matching IPsec rules of the specified value are disabled.
This parameter specifies the encapsulation state for network traffic sent to a tunnel end point that is already IPsec protected. If this
parameter is set to True, then the network traffic sent to a tunnel end point that is already IPsec protected does not have to be encapsulated
again. This option can improve network performance in the case where network traffic that is already end-to-end protected by other IPsec
rules.
The default value is False.
This parameter is only supported on Windows?? Server?????? 2008?? R2 and Windows Server 2012.
Required? false
Position? named
Default value
Accept pipeline input? false
Accept wildcard characters? false
-ForwardPathLifetime <UInt32[]>
Specifies that matching IPsec rules of the specified path lifetime value are disabled.
This parameter specifies the session key lifetime for an IPsec rule, in minutes. The acceptable values for this parameter are: 78 through
172799.
The default value is 0 minutes.
When managing a GPO, the default setting is NotConfigured.
This parameter is only supported on Windows Server 2012.
Required? false
Position? named
Default value
Accept pipeline input? false
Accept wildcard characters? false
-GPOSession <String>
Specifies the network GPO from which to retrieve the rules to be disabled.
This parameter is used in the same way as the PolicyStore parameter. When modifying GPOs in Windows PowerShell????, each change to a GPO requires
the entire GPO to be loaded, modified, and saved back. On a busy Domain Controller (DC), this can be a slow and resource-heavy operation. A
GPO Session loads a domain GPO onto the local computer and makes all changes in a batch, before saving it back. This reduces the load on the
DC and speeds up the Windows PowerShell cmdlets. To load a GPO Session, use the Open-NetGPO cmdlet. To save a GPO Session, use the Save-NetGPO
cmdlet.
Required? false
Position? named
Default value
Accept pipeline input? false
Accept wildcard characters? false
-Group <String[]>
Specifies that only matching IPsec rules of the indicated group association are disabled. Wildcard characters are accepted.
This parameter specifies the source string for the DisplayGroup parameter. If the DisplayGroup parameter value is a localizable string, then
this parameter contains an indirect string. Rule groups can be used to organize rules by influence and allows batch rule modifications. Using
the Set-NetIPsecRule cmdlets, if the group name is specified for a set of rules or sets, then all of the rules or sets in that group receive
the same set of modifications. It is good practice to specify this parameter value with a universal and world-ready indirect @FirewallAPI
name.
Note: The DisplayGroup parameter cannot be specified upon object creation using the New-NetIPsecRule cmdlet, but can be modified using
dot-notation and the Set-NetIPsecRule cmdlet.
Required? false
Position? named
Default value
Accept pipeline input? false
Accept wildcard characters? false
-InboundSecurity <SecurityPolicy[]>
Specifies that matching IPsec rules of the indicated security policy are disabled.
This parameter determines the degree of enforcement for security on inbound traffic.
The acceptable values for this parameter are:??
-- None: No authentication is requested or required for connections that match the rule. It specifies that the local computer does not
attempt authentication for any network connections that match this rule. This option is typically used to grant IPsec exemptions for network
connections that do not need to be protected by IPsec, but would otherwise match other rules that could cause the connection to be dropped.
-- Request: Authentication is requested for connections that match the rule. The local computer attempts to authenticate any inbound network
connections that match this rule, but allows the connection if the authentication attempt is no successful.
-- Require: Authentication is required for connections that match the rule. If the authentication is not successful, then the inbound network
traffic is discarded.
The default value is None.
When the OutboundSecurity parameter is also specified, the following configurations are valid:
InboundSecurity\\OutboundSecurity = None\\None, Request\\None, Request\\Request, Require\\Request, or Require\\Require.
Required? false
Position? named
Default value
Accept pipeline input? false
Accept wildcard characters? false
-InputObject <CimInstance[]>
Specifies the input to this cmdlet. You can use this parameter, or you can pipe the input to this cmdlet.
Required? true
Position? named
Default value
Accept pipeline input? True (ByValue)
Accept wildcard characters? false
-IPsecRuleName <String[]>
Specifies that only matching IPsec rules of the indicated name are disabled. Wildcard characters are accepted.
This parameter acts just like a file name, in that only one rule with a given name may exist in a policy store at a time. During group policy
processing and policy merge, rules that have the same name but come from multiple stores being merged, will overwrite one another so that only
one exists. This overwriting behavior is desirable if the rules serve the same purpose. For instance, all of the firewall rules have specific
names, so if an administrator can copy these rules to a GPO, and the rules will override the local versions on a local computer. GPOs can have
precedence. So if an administrator has a different or more specific rule with the same name in a higher-precedence GPO, then it overrides
other rules that exist. The default value is a randomly assigned value.
When the defaults for main mode encryption need to overridden, specify the customized parameters and set this parameter, making it the new
default setting for encryption.
Required? true
Position? 1
Default value
Accept pipeline input? True (ByPropertyName)
Accept wildcard characters? false
-KeyModule <KeyModule[]>
Specifies that matching IPsec rules of the indicated key module are disabled.
This parameter specifies which keying modules to negotiate.
The acceptable values for this parameter are:?? Default, AuthIP, IKEv1, or IKEv2.
-- Default: Equivalent to both IKEv1 and AuthIP. Required in order for the rule to be applied to computers running Windows versions prior to
Windows Server2008R2.
---- Note: There are authorization and cryptographic methods that are only compatible with certain keying modules. This is a very advanced
setting intended only for specific interoperability scenarios. Overriding this parameter value may result in traffic being sent in plain-text
if the authorization and cryptographic settings are not supported by the keying modules there.
-- AuthIP: Supported with phase 2 authentication.
-- IKEv1: Supported with pre-shared key (PSK), Certificates, and Kerberos.
-- IKEv2: Not supported with Kerberos, PSK, or NT LAN Manager (NTLM).
Note: Windows versions prior to Windows Server 2012 only support the Default configuration.
Required? false
Position? named
Default value
Accept pipeline input? false
Accept wildcard characters? false
-Machine <String[]>
Specifies that matching IPsec rules of the indicated computer accounts are disabled.
This parameter specifies that only network packets that are authenticated as incoming from or outgoing to a computer identified in the list of
computer accounts (SID) match this rule. This parameter value is specified as an SDDL string.
Required? false
Position? named
Default value
Accept pipeline input? false
Accept wildcard characters? false
-Mode <IPsecMode[]>
Specifies that matching IPsec rules of the indicated mode are disabled.
This parameter specifies the type of IPsec mode connection that the IPsec rule defines.
The acceptable values for this parameter are:?? None, Transport, or Tunnel.
The default value is Transport.
Required? false
Position? named
Default value
Accept pipeline input? false
Accept wildcard characters? false
-OutboundSecurity <SecurityPolicy[]>
Specifies that matching IPsec rules of the indicated security policy are disabled.
This parameter determines the degree of enforcement for security on outbound traffic.
The acceptable values for this parameter are:??
-- None: No authentication is requested or required for connections that match the rule. It specifies that the local computer does not
attempt authentication for any network connections that match this rule. This option is typically used to grant IPsec exemptions for network
connections that do not need to be protected by IPsec, but would otherwise match other rules that could cause the connection to be dropped.
-- Request: Authentication is requested for connections that match the rule. The local computer attempts to authenticate any outbound network
connections that match this rule, but allows the connection if the authentication attempt fails.
-- Require: Authentication is required for connections that match the rule. If the authentication is not successful, then the outbound
network traffic is discarded.
The default value is None.
When the InboundSecurity parameter is also specified, the following configurations are valid:
InboundSecurity/OutboundSecurity = None\\None, Request\\None, Request\\Request, Require\\Request, or Require\\Require.
Required? false
Position? named
Default value
Accept pipeline input? false
Accept wildcard characters? false
-PassThru [<SwitchParameter>]
Returns an object representing the item with which you are working. By default, this cmdlet does not generate any output.
Required? false
Position? named
Default value
Accept pipeline input? false
Accept wildcard characters? false
-Phase1AuthSet <String[]>
Gets the IPsec rules that are associated with the given phase 1 authentication set to be disabled.
A NetIPsecPhase1AuthSet object represents the phase 1 authorization set conditions associated with an IPsec or main mode rule. This parameter
sets the methods for main mode negotiation by describing the proposals for computer authentication. See the Get-NetIPsecPhase1AuthSet cmdlet
for more information.
Alternatively, the Phase2AuthSet parameter can be used for the same purpose, but does not allow the authentication set to be piped into the
cmdlet and the set must be specified with the IPsecRuleName parameter.
Required? false
Position? named
Default value
Accept pipeline input? false
Accept wildcard characters? false
-Phase2AuthSet <String[]>
Gets the IPsec rules that are associated with the given phase 2 authentication set to be disabled.
A NetIPsecPhase2AuthSet object represents the phase 2 authorization set conditions associated with an IPsec or main mode rule. This parameter
sets the methods for main mode negotiation by describing the proposals for computer authentication. See the Get-NetIPsecPhase2AuthSet cmdlet
for more information.
Alternatively, the Phase1AuthSet parameter can be used for the same purpose, but does not allow the authentication set to be piped into the
cmdlet and the set must be specified with the IPsecRuleName parameter.
Required? false
Position? named
Default value
Accept pipeline input? false
Accept wildcard characters? false
-PolicyStore <String>
Specifies the policy store from which to retrieve the rules to be disabled.
A policy store is a container for firewall and IPsec policy.
The acceptable values for this parameter are:??
-- PersistentStore: Sometimes called static rules, this store contains the persistent policy for the local computer. This policy is not from
GPOs, and has been created manually or programmatically (during application installation) on the computer. Rules created in this store are
attached to the ActiveStore and activated on the computer immediately.
-- ActiveStore: This store contains the currently active policy, which is the sum of all policy stores that apply to the computer. This is
the resultant set of policy (RSOP) for the local computer (the sum of all GPOs that apply to the computer), and the local stores (the
PersistentStore, the static Windows service hardening (WSH), and the configurable WSH).
---- GPOs are also policy stores. Computer GPOs can be specified as follows.
------ ????????PolicyStore hostname.
---- Active Directory GPOs can be specified as follows.
----- ????????PolicyStore domain.fqdn.com\\GPO_Friendly_Name.
------ Such as the following.
-------- -PolicyStore localhost
-------- -PolicyStore corp.contoso.com\\FirewallPolicy
---- Active Directory GPOs can be created using the New-GPO cmdlet or the Group Policy Management Console.
-- RSOP: This read-only store contains the sum of all GPOs applied to the local computer.
-- SystemDefaults: This read-only store contains the default state of firewall rules that ship with Windows Server 2012.
-- StaticServiceStore: This read-only store contains all the service restrictions that ship with Windows Server 2012. Optional and
product-dependent features are considered part of Windows Server 2012 for the purposes of WFAS.
-- ConfigurableServiceStore: This read-write store contains all the service restrictions that are added for third-party services. In
addition, network isolation rules that are created for Windows Store application containers will appear in this policy store.
The default value is PersistentStore.
Note: The Set-NetIPsecRule cmdlet cannot be used to add an object to a policy store. An object can only be added to a policy store at creation
time with the Copy-NetIPsecRule cmdlet or with the New-NetIPsecRule cmdlet.
Required? false
Position? named
Default value
Accept pipeline input? false
Accept wildcard characters? false
-PolicyStoreSource <String[]>
Specifies that IPsec rules matching the indicated policy store source are disabled.
This parameter contains a path to the policy store where the rule originated if the object is retrieved from the ActiveStore with the
TracePolicyStoreSource option set. This parameter value is automatically generated and should not be modified.
The monitoring output from this parameter is not completely compatible with the PolicyStore parameter. This parameter value cannot always be
passed into the PolicyStore parameter. Domain GPOs are one example in which this parameter contains only the GPO name, not the domain name.
Required? false
Position? named
Default value
Accept pipeline input? false
Accept wildcard characters? false
-PolicyStoreSourceType <PolicyStoreType[]>
Specifies that IPsec rules that match the indicated policy store source type are disabled.
This parameter describes the type of policy store where the rule originated if the object is retrieved from the ActiveStore with the
TracePolicyStoreSource option set. This parameter value is automatically generated and should not be modified.
The acceptable values for this parameter are:??
-- Local: The object originates from the local store.
-- GroupPolicy: The object originates from a GPO.
-- Dynamic: The object originates from the local runtime state. This policy store name is not valid for use in cmdlets, but may appear when
monitoring active policy.
-- Generated: The object was generated automatically. This policy store name is not valid for use in cmdlets, but may appear when monitoring
active policy.
-- Hardcoded: The object was hard-coded. This policy store name is not valid for use in cmdlets, but may appear when monitoring active policy.
Required? false
Position? named
Default value
Accept pipeline input? false
Accept wildcard characters? false
-PrimaryStatus <PrimaryStatus[]>
Specifies that IPsec rules that match the indicated primary status are disabled.
This parameter specifies the overall status of the rule.
-- OK: Specifies that the rule will work as specified.
-- Degraded: Specifies that one or more parts of the rule will not be enforced.
-- Error: Specifies that the computer is unable to use the rule at all.
See the Status and StatusCode fields of the object for more detailed status information.
Required? false
Position? named
Default value
Accept pipeline input? false
Accept wildcard characters? false
-QuickModeCryptoSet <String[]>
Specifies that matching IPsec rules of the specified quick mode cryptographic set are disabled.
This parameter specifies the quick mode cryptographic set to be associated with the IPsec rule.
A NetIPsecMainModeCryptoSet object represents quick mode cryptographic conditions associated with an IPsec rule. This parameter sets the
methods for quick mode negotiation by describing the proposals for encryption. See the New-NetIPsecQuickModeCryptoSet cmdlet for more
information.
Alternatively, the AssociatedNetIPsecQuickModeCryptoSet parameter can be used for the same purpose, but is used to pipe the input set into the
rule.
Note: When specifying cryptographic sets, the IPsecRuleName parameter value of the cryptographic set must be used. The object cannot be
directly passed to this cmdlet.
Required? false
Position? named
Default value
Accept pipeline input? false
Accept wildcard characters? false
-RemoteTunnelHostname <String[]>
Specifies that matching IPsec rules of the specified second end point tunnel host name are disabled.
Specifies a fully qualified DNS name that resolves to a list of remote tunnel end points.
This parameter is only supported on Windows Server 2012.
Note: This parameter can only be used with multiple remote tunnel end points. Specifying this parameter prevents a non-asymmetric tunnel mode
IPsec rule from being created. Rule creation will fail when a single remote tunnel end point and this parameter are specified, or when remote
tunnel end point is Any and this parameter is specified.
Required? false
Position? named
Default value
Accept pipeline input? false
Accept wildcard characters? false
-RequireAuthorization <Boolean[]>
Indicates that matching IPsec rules of the specified value are disabled.
Specifies the given value for an IPsec rule.
If this parameter is set to True, then enforcement of authorization is allowed for end points.
This parameter is only supported on Windows Server?? 2008?? R2 and Windows Server 2012.
Required? false
Position? named
Default value
Accept pipeline input? false
Accept wildcard characters? false
-Status <String[]>
Specifies that IPsec rules that match the indicated status are disabled.
This parameter describes the status message for the specified status code value. The status code is a numerical value that indicates any
syntax, parsing, or runtime errors in the rule or set. This parameter value should not be modified.
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
-TracePolicyStore [<SwitchParameter>]
Specifies that the name of the source GPO is queried and set to the PolicyStoreSource parameter value.
Required? false
Position? named
Default value
Accept pipeline input? false
Accept wildcard characters? false
-User <String[]>
Specifies that matching IPsec rules of the indicated user accounts are disabled.
This parameter specifies that only network packets that are authenticated as incoming from or outgoing to a user identified in the list of
user accounts match this rule. This parameter value is specified as an SDDL string.
Required? false
Position? named
Default value
Accept pipeline input? false
Accept wildcard characters? false
-Confirm [<SwitchParameter>]
Prompts you for confirmation before running the cmdlet.
Required? false
Position? named
Default value false
Accept pipeline input? false
Accept wildcard characters? false
-WhatIf [<SwitchParameter>]
Shows what would happen if the cmdlet runs. The cmdlet is not run.
Required? false
Position? named
Default value false
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
Microsoft.Management.Infrastructure.CimInstance#root\\StandardCimv2\\MSFT_NetAddressFilter
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.
Microsoft.Management.Infrastructure.CimInstance#root\\StandardCimv2\\MSFT_NetConSecRule[]
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.
Microsoft.Management.Infrastructure.CimInstance#root\\StandardCimv2\\MSFT_NetFirewallProfile
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.
Microsoft.Management.Infrastructure.CimInstance#root\\StandardCimv2\\MSFT_NetIKEP1AuthSet
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.
Microsoft.Management.Infrastructure.CimInstance#root\\StandardCimv2\\MSFT_NetIKEP2AuthSet
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.
Microsoft.Management.Infrastructure.CimInstance#root\\StandardCimv2\\MSFT_NetIKEQMCryptoSet
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.
Microsoft.Management.Infrastructure.CimInstance#root\\StandardCimv2\\MSFT_NetInterfaceFilter
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.
Microsoft.Management.Infrastructure.CimInstance#root\\StandardCimv2\\MSFT_NetInterfaceTypeFilter
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.
Microsoft.Management.Infrastructure.CimInstance#root\\StandardCimv2\\MSFT_NetProtocolPortFilter
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.
OUTPUTS
Microsoft.Management.Infrastructure.CimInstance#root\\StandardCimv2\\MSFT_NetConSecRule[]
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
PS C:\\>Disable-NetIPsecRule -DisplayName "Require Outbound Authentication" -PolicyStore domain.contoso.com\\gpo_name
This example disables an IPsec rule in a GPO given the localized name.
EXAMPLE 2
PS C:\\>Disable-NetIPsecRule ????????Group "Ipsec-DirectAccess-Traffic" ????????Mode Transport -PolicyStore ActiveStore
This example disables all transport mode DA rules on the local computer.
EXAMPLE 3
PS C:\\>$phase1AuthSet = Get-NetIPsecPhase1AuthSet ????????DisplayName "Computer Kerb, CA Auth"
PS C:\\>Disable-NetIPsecRule ????????InputObject $phase1AuthSet
This example disables the IPsec rules associated with the specified phase 1 authentication set.
RELATED LINKS
Online Version: http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=225799
Copy-NetIPsecRule
Enable-NetIPsecRule
Get-NetFirewallAddressFilter
Get-NetFirewallInterfaceFilter
Get-NetFirewallInterfaceTypeFilter
Get-NetFirewallPortFilter
Get-NetFirewallProfile
Get-NetIPsecPhase1AuthSet
Get-NetIPsecPhase2AuthSet
Get-NetIPsecQuickModeCryptoSet
Get-NetIPsecRule
New-NetIPsecRule
Open-NetGPO
Remove-NetIPsecRule
Save-NetGPO
Set-NetIPsecRule
New-GPO