Invoke-Telnet Cmdlet
Parameters Output Objects Config Settings
The Invoke-Telnet component is used to remotely execute a command on a Telnet server.
Syntax
Invoke-Telnet [parameters]
Remarks
This cmdlet establishes a telnet connection to a server which starts up the user's default shell. Using the cmdlet is very simple. The destination is specified by Server and the remote shell's prompt is specified by ShellPrompt. In order to specify the authentication credentials, set the Credential parameter.
Command contains the command you wish to execute on the remote machine. The output of the command is returned in one or more TelnetResponse objects.
The cmdlets support pipeline input for some of their parameters. Prebuilding an object and piping it to the cmdlet is very useful, but should be used with caution to prevent security conflicts. Steps have been taken to decrease the risk of a possibly accidental pipe to the cmdlet, for instance, the Credential parameter cannot be piped to the cmdlet and must be specified manually.
# execute a simple command
invoke-telnet $server -user $username -password $password -command "ls -la" -shellprompt "bash-2.05a$ " -eol "`r`n" | foreach-object{$_.Text}
Connection Handling
This cmdlet supports persistent connections through the Connection parameter. To establish a new Telnet connection, use the Connect-Telnet cmdlet. To close the connection, use the Disconnect-Telnet cmdlet.
Parameter List
The following is the full list of the parameters of the cmdlet with short descriptions. Click on the links for further details.
Connection | An already established connection. |
LogFile | The location of a file to which debug information is written. |
Command | The command to be sent to the server. |
Config | Specifies one or more configuration settings. |
Credential | The PSCredential object to use for user/password authentication. |
EOL | The EOL used to parse the response. |
FirewallHost | Name or IP address of firewall. |
FirewallPassword | A password if authentication is to be used when connecting through the firewall. |
FirewallPort | The port of the firewall to which to connect. |
FirewallType | Determines the type of firewall to connect through. |
FirewallUser | A user name if authentication is to be used connecting through a firewall. |
LocalIP | The IP address of the local interface to use. |
LogFile | The location of a file to which debug information is written. |
LoginPrompt | The format of the prompt for the user's login. |
NoAuthentication | Disables authentication during connection. |
Password | The password to use for authentication. |
PasswordPrompt | The format of the prompt for the user's password. |
Port | The port to be used. |
Server | The address of the Server. |
ShellPrompt | The shell prompt on the remote shell on which the telnet connection is established. |
ShellPromptExpression | A regular expression to match the shell prompt returned by the server. |
Timeout | The maximum time allowed for the operation. |
User | The username to use for authentication. |
Output Objects
The following is the full list of the output objects returned by the cmdlet with short descriptions. Click on the links for further details.
TelnetResponse | Object containing part or all of the response from server. |
Config Settings
The following is a list of config settings for the cmdlet with short descriptions. Click on the links for further details.
ConnectionTimeout | Sets a separate timeout value for establishing a connection. |
FirewallAutoDetect | Tells the component whether or not to automatically detect and use firewall system settings, if available. |
FirewallHost | Name or IP address of firewall (optional). |
FirewallPassword | Password to be used if authentication is to be used when connecting through the firewall. |
FirewallPort | The TCP port for the FirewallHost;. |
FirewallType | Determines the type of firewall to connect through. |
FirewallUser | A user name if authentication is to be used connecting through a firewall. |
KeepAliveInterval | The retry interval, in milliseconds, to be used when a TCP keep-alive packet is sent and no response is received. |
KeepAliveTime | The inactivity time in milliseconds before a TCP keep-alive packet is sent. |
Linger | When set to True, connections are terminated gracefully. |
LingerTime | Time in seconds to have the connection linger. |
LocalHost | The name of the local host through which connections are initiated or accepted. |
LocalPort | The port in the local host where the component binds. |
MaxLineLength | The maximum amount of data to accumulate when no EOL is found. |
MaxTransferRate | The transfer rate limit in bytes per second. |
ProxyExceptionsList | A semicolon separated list of hosts and IPs to bypass when using a proxy. |
TCPKeepAlive | Determines whether or not the keep alive socket option is enabled. |
TcpNoDelay | Whether or not to delay when sending packets. |
UseIPv6 | Whether to use IPv6. |
AbsoluteTimeout | Determines whether timeouts are inactivity timeouts or absolute timeouts. |
FirewallData | Used to send extra data to the firewall. |
InBufferSize | The size in bytes of the incoming queue of the socket. |
OutBufferSize | The size in bytes of the outgoing queue of the socket. |
BuildInfo | Information about the product's build. |
CodePage | The system code page used for Unicode to Multibyte translations. |
LicenseInfo | Information about the current license. |
MaskSensitive | Whether sensitive data is masked in log messages. |
UseInternalSecurityAPI | Tells the component whether or not to use the system security libraries or an internal implementation. |
LogFile Parameter (Invoke-Telnet Cmdlet)
The location of a file to which debug information is written.
Syntax
Invoke-Telnet -LogFile string
Remarks
When specified, the cmdlet will log debug information to the file. If the file exists, the information will be appended.Default Value
null
Connection Parameter (Invoke-Telnet Cmdlet)
An existing Telnet connection.
Syntax
Invoke-Telnet -Connection TelnetConnection
Remarks
Represents an existing, persistent Telnet connection to be used. After this cmdlet executes, the connection will remain opened to be used in an another call. New connections can be established using the Connect-Telnet cmdlet and closed using the Disconnect-Telnet cmdlet.Default Value
null
Command Property (Invoke-Telnet Cmdlet)
The command to be sent to the server.
Syntax
Invoke-Telnet -Command string
Remarks
Sends standard input to the program executing on the remote host.
Default Value
""
Parameter Position
2
This is a required parameter.
Config Property (Invoke-Telnet Cmdlet)
Specifies one or more configuration settings.
Syntax
Invoke-Telnet -Config string[]
Remarks
The Config parameter takes one or more name-value pairs that represent the name of the configuration setting and value, i.e.: -config "Name=Value"
Default Value
null
Credential Property (Invoke-Telnet Cmdlet)
The PSCredential object to use for user/password authentication.
Syntax
Invoke-Telnet -Credential PSCredential
Remarks
Every cmdlet that supports user authentication will expose a Credential parameter. A PSCredential object should be specified for this parameter. Alternatively, the User and Password parameters can be set to represent the credential information.
If the cmdlet supports client key authentication it uses the password field of this object for the certificate's password. This setting is enabled by using public key authentication. Note: Due to security reasons, it is recommended that you use the Credential parameter rather than User and Password to specify the authentication information.
Default Value
null
Parameter Position
1
Parameter Alias
auth
EOL Property (Invoke-Telnet Cmdlet)
The EOL used to parse the response.
Syntax
Invoke-Telnet -EOL string
Remarks
Default value is CR, which chunks the incoming data based on the occurrence of the carriage return character CR ("\r"). When EOL is encountered, the data received prior to the eol is reported via a TelnetResponse output and cleared from the buffer.
Default Value
"\r"
FirewallHost Property (Invoke-Telnet Cmdlet)
Name or IP address of firewall.
Syntax
Invoke-Telnet -FirewallHost string
Remarks
If a FirewallHost is given, requested connections will be authenticated through the specified firewall when connecting.
If the FirewallHost parameter is set to a Domain Name, a DNS request is initiated. Upon successful termination of the request, the FirewallHost parameter is set to the corresponding address. If the search is not successful, an error is returned.
Default Value
""
FirewallPassword Property (Invoke-Telnet Cmdlet)
A password if authentication is to be used when connecting through the firewall.
Syntax
Invoke-Telnet -FirewallPassword string
Remarks
If FirewallHost is specified, the FirewallUser and FirewallPassword properties are used to authenticate against the firewall.
Default Value
""
FirewallPort Property (Invoke-Telnet Cmdlet)
The port of the firewall to which to connect.
Syntax
Invoke-Telnet -FirewallPort int
Remarks
The TCP port for the FirewallHost. See the description of the FirewallHost parameter for details.
Note that the FirewallPort is set automatically when FirewallType is set to a valid value. See the description of the FirewallType parameter for details. Setting this parameter will overwrite the default settings for the firewall port as specified by FirewallType.
Default Value
0
FirewallType Property (Invoke-Telnet Cmdlet)
Determines the type of firewall to connect through.
Syntax
Invoke-Telnet -FirewallType string
Remarks
The applicable values are the following:
None | No firewall (default setting). |
Tunnel | Connect through a tunneling proxy. FirewallPort is set to 80. |
SOCKS4 | Connect through a SOCKS4 Proxy. FirewallPort is set to 1080. |
SOCKS5 | Connect through a SOCKS5 Proxy. FirewallPort is set to 1080. |
Default Value
0
FirewallUser Property (Invoke-Telnet Cmdlet)
A user name if authentication is to be used connecting through a firewall.
Syntax
Invoke-Telnet -FirewallUser string
Remarks
If FirewallHost is specified, the FirewallUser and FirewallPassword properties are used to authenticate against the firewall.
Default Value
""
LocalIP Property (Invoke-Telnet Cmdlet)
The IP address of the local interface to use.
Syntax
Invoke-Telnet -LocalIP string
Remarks
This parameter is useful when the cmdlet is running on a machine that has more than one network interface (each with its own IP address and network access privileges).
Default Value
""
Parameter Alias
LocalAddress
LogFile Property (Invoke-Telnet Cmdlet)
The location of a file to which debug information is written.
Syntax
Invoke-Telnet -LogFile string
Remarks
When specified, the cmdlet will log debug information to the file. If the file exists, the information will be appended.
Default Value
""
LoginPrompt Property (Invoke-Telnet Cmdlet)
The format of the prompt for the user's login.
Syntax
Invoke-Telnet -LoginPrompt string
Remarks
This is not a case sensitive field.
Default Value
"Login:"
Parameter Position
4
NoAuthentication Property (Invoke-Telnet Cmdlet)
Disables authentication during connection.
Syntax
Invoke-Telnet -NoAuthentication SwitchParameter
Remarks
If set, the cmdlet will not try to authenticate with the server and will simply wait for the ShellPrompt before sending the command.
Default Value
false
Password Property (Invoke-Telnet Cmdlet)
The password to use for authentication.
Syntax
Invoke-Telnet -Password string
Remarks
Every time User, or Password are set, the cmdlet will authenticate with the server. It is recommended that the Credential parameter is set instead of User/Password because of security reasons. If both Credential and this parameter is set, the Credential value is used.
Default Value
""
PasswordPrompt Property (Invoke-Telnet Cmdlet)
The format of the prompt for the user's password.
Syntax
Invoke-Telnet -PasswordPrompt string
Remarks
This is not a case sensitive field.
Default Value
"Password:"
Parameter Position
5
Port Property (Invoke-Telnet Cmdlet)
The port to be used.
Syntax
Invoke-Telnet -Port int
Remarks
Port specifies a service port on the remote host to which to connect.
A valid port number (a value between 1 and 65535) is required for the connection to take place.
Default Value
23
Server Property (Invoke-Telnet Cmdlet)
The address of the Server.
Syntax
Invoke-Telnet -Server string
Remarks
The cmdlet requires a server address to be provided. Either an IP address or the server host name can be provided.
Default Value
""
Parameter Position
0
This is a required parameter.
ShellPrompt Property (Invoke-Telnet Cmdlet)
The shell prompt on the remote shell on which the telnet connection is established.
Syntax
Invoke-Telnet -ShellPrompt string
Remarks
This is a case sensitive field.
Default Value
""
Parameter Position
3
Parameter Alias
Prompt
ShellPromptExpression Property (Invoke-Telnet Cmdlet)
A regular expression to match the shell prompt returned by the server.
Syntax
Invoke-Telnet -ShellPromptExpression string
Remarks
If ShellPromptExpression is specified, the cmdlet will not use the SEXEC protocol, but instead will just request shell access and wait until a shell prompt that matches the specified regular expression come up. Commands will then be executed through the shell instead of the SExec mechanism, which allows multiple commands sent over a single connection to share state on the server.
Note: The value specified in ShellPromptExpression must be a properly formatted regular expression.
Default Value
""
Timeout Property (Invoke-Telnet Cmdlet)
The maximum time allowed for the operation.
Syntax
Invoke-Telnet -Timeout int
Remarks
After the specified interval in seconds, the cmdlet will throw a Timeout error if the operation is not completed. The value of 0 causes for the cmdlet to wait indefinitely.
Default Value
10
User Property (Invoke-Telnet Cmdlet)
The username to use for authentication.
Syntax
Invoke-Telnet -User string
Remarks
Every time User and Password are set, the cmdlet will authenticate with the server. It is recommended that the Credential parameter is set instead of User/Password because of security reasons. If both Credential and this parameter is set, the Credential value is used.
Default Value
""
TelnetResponse Output Object (Invoke-Telnet Cmdlet)
Object containing part or all of the response from server.
Syntax
Object TelnetResponse {string Text;
}
Remarks
After sending a command, one or more Shell objects are returned. The text coming from the server is parsed based on the EOL property. The incoming data is provided through the Text parameter.
Config Settings (Invoke-Telnet Cmdlet)
The cmdlet accepts one or more of the following configuration settings. Configuration settings are similar in functionality to properties, but they are rarely used. In order to avoid "polluting" the property namespace of the cmdlet, access to these internal properties is provided through the Config method.TCPClient Config Settings
If the FirewallHost setting is set to a Domain Name, a DNS request is initiated. Upon successful termination of the request, the FirewallHost setting is set to the corresponding address. If the search is not successful, an error is returned.
Note: This setting is provided for use by cmdlets that do not directly expose Firewall properties.
Note: This setting is provided for use by cmdlets that do not directly expose Firewall properties.
Note: This configuration setting is provided for use by cmdlets that do not directly expose Firewall properties.
0 | No firewall (default setting). |
1 | Connect through a tunneling proxy. FirewallPort is set to 80. |
2 | Connect through a SOCKS4 Proxy. FirewallPort is set to 1080. |
3 | Connect through a SOCKS5 Proxy. FirewallPort is set to 1080. |
10 | Connect through a SOCKS4A Proxy. FirewallPort is set to 1080. |
Note: This setting is provided for use by cmdlets that do not directly expose Firewall properties.
Note: This setting is provided for use by cmdlets that do not directly expose Firewall properties.
Note: This value is not applicable in macOS.
In the case that Linger is True (default), two scenarios determine how long the connection will linger. In the first, if LingerTime is 0 (default), the system will attempt to send pending data for a connection until the default IP timeout expires.
In the second scenario, if LingerTime is a positive value, the system will attempt to send pending data until the specified LingerTime is reached. If this attempt fails, then the system will reset the connection.
The default behavior (which is also the default mode for stream sockets) might result in a long delay in closing the connection. Although the cmdlet returns control immediately, the system could hold system resources until all pending data are sent (even after your application closes).
Setting this property to False forces an immediate disconnection. If you know that the other side has received all the data you sent (e.g., by a client acknowledgment), setting this property to False might be the appropriate course of action.
In multi-homed hosts (machines with more than one IP interface) setting LocalHost to the value of an interface will make the cmdlet initiate connections (or accept in the case of server cmdlets) only through that interface.
If the cmdlet is connected, the LocalHost setting shows the IP address of the interface through which the connection is made in internet dotted format (aaa.bbb.ccc.ddd). In most cases, this is the address of the local host, except for multi-homed hosts (machines with more than one IP interface).
Setting this to 0 (default) enables the system to choose a port at random. The chosen port will be shown by LocalPort after the connection is established.
LocalPort cannot be changed once a connection is made. Any attempt to set this when a connection is active will generate an error.
This; setting is useful when trying to connect to services that require a trusted port in the client side. An example is the remote shell (rsh) service in UNIX systems.
If an EOL string is found in the input stream before MaxLineLength bytes are received, the DataIn event is fired with the EOL parameter set to True, and the buffer is reset.
If no EOL is found, and MaxLineLength bytes are accumulated in the buffer, the DataIn event is fired with the EOL parameter set to False, and the buffer is reset.
The minimum value for MaxLineLength is 256 bytes. The default value is 2048 bytes.
www.google.com;www.nsoftware.com
Note: This value is not applicable in Java.
By default, this config is set to false.
0 | IPv4 Only |
1 | IPv6 Only |
2 | IPv6 with IPv4 fallback |
Socket Config Settings
Note: This option is not valid for UDP ports.
Some TCP/IP implementations do not support variable buffer sizes. If that is the case, when the cmdlet is activated the InBufferSize reverts to its defined size. The same happens if you attempt to make it too large or too small.
Some TCP/IP implementations do not support variable buffer sizes. If that is the case, when the cmdlet is activated the OutBufferSize reverts to its defined size. The same happens if you attempt to make it too large or too small.
Base Config Settings
The following is a list of valid code page identifiers:
Identifier | Name |
037 | IBM EBCDIC - U.S./Canada |
437 | OEM - United States |
500 | IBM EBCDIC - International |
708 | Arabic - ASMO 708 |
709 | Arabic - ASMO 449+, BCON V4 |
710 | Arabic - Transparent Arabic |
720 | Arabic - Transparent ASMO |
737 | OEM - Greek (formerly 437G) |
775 | OEM - Baltic |
850 | OEM - Multilingual Latin I |
852 | OEM - Latin II |
855 | OEM - Cyrillic (primarily Russian) |
857 | OEM - Turkish |
858 | OEM - Multilingual Latin I + Euro symbol |
860 | OEM - Portuguese |
861 | OEM - Icelandic |
862 | OEM - Hebrew |
863 | OEM - Canadian-French |
864 | OEM - Arabic |
865 | OEM - Nordic |
866 | OEM - Russian |
869 | OEM - Modern Greek |
870 | IBM EBCDIC - Multilingual/ROECE (Latin-2) |
874 | ANSI/OEM - Thai (same as 28605, ISO 8859-15) |
875 | IBM EBCDIC - Modern Greek |
932 | ANSI/OEM - Japanese, Shift-JIS |
936 | ANSI/OEM - Simplified Chinese (PRC, Singapore) |
949 | ANSI/OEM - Korean (Unified Hangul Code) |
950 | ANSI/OEM - Traditional Chinese (Taiwan; Hong Kong SAR, PRC) |
1026 | IBM EBCDIC - Turkish (Latin-5) |
1047 | IBM EBCDIC - Latin 1/Open System |
1140 | IBM EBCDIC - U.S./Canada (037 + Euro symbol) |
1141 | IBM EBCDIC - Germany (20273 + Euro symbol) |
1142 | IBM EBCDIC - Denmark/Norway (20277 + Euro symbol) |
1143 | IBM EBCDIC - Finland/Sweden (20278 + Euro symbol) |
1144 | IBM EBCDIC - Italy (20280 + Euro symbol) |
1145 | IBM EBCDIC - Latin America/Spain (20284 + Euro symbol) |
1146 | IBM EBCDIC - United Kingdom (20285 + Euro symbol) |
1147 | IBM EBCDIC - France (20297 + Euro symbol) |
1148 | IBM EBCDIC - International (500 + Euro symbol) |
1149 | IBM EBCDIC - Icelandic (20871 + Euro symbol) |
1200 | Unicode UCS-2 Little-Endian (BMP of ISO 10646) |
1201 | Unicode UCS-2 Big-Endian |
1250 | ANSI - Central European |
1251 | ANSI - Cyrillic |
1252 | ANSI - Latin I |
1253 | ANSI - Greek |
1254 | ANSI - Turkish |
1255 | ANSI - Hebrew |
1256 | ANSI - Arabic |
1257 | ANSI - Baltic |
1258 | ANSI/OEM - Vietnamese |
1361 | Korean (Johab) |
10000 | MAC - Roman |
10001 | MAC - Japanese |
10002 | MAC - Traditional Chinese (Big5) |
10003 | MAC - Korean |
10004 | MAC - Arabic |
10005 | MAC - Hebrew |
10006 | MAC - Greek I |
10007 | MAC - Cyrillic |
10008 | MAC - Simplified Chinese (GB 2312) |
10010 | MAC - Romania |
10017 | MAC - Ukraine |
10021 | MAC - Thai |
10029 | MAC - Latin II |
10079 | MAC - Icelandic |
10081 | MAC - Turkish |
10082 | MAC - Croatia |
12000 | Unicode UCS-4 Little-Endian |
12001 | Unicode UCS-4 Big-Endian |
20000 | CNS - Taiwan |
20001 | TCA - Taiwan |
20002 | Eten - Taiwan |
20003 | IBM5550 - Taiwan |
20004 | TeleText - Taiwan |
20005 | Wang - Taiwan |
20105 | IA5 IRV International Alphabet No. 5 (7-bit) |
20106 | IA5 German (7-bit) |
20107 | IA5 Swedish (7-bit) |
20108 | IA5 Norwegian (7-bit) |
20127 | US-ASCII (7-bit) |
20261 | T.61 |
20269 | ISO 6937 Non-Spacing Accent |
20273 | IBM EBCDIC - Germany |
20277 | IBM EBCDIC - Denmark/Norway |
20278 | IBM EBCDIC - Finland/Sweden |
20280 | IBM EBCDIC - Italy |
20284 | IBM EBCDIC - Latin America/Spain |
20285 | IBM EBCDIC - United Kingdom |
20290 | IBM EBCDIC - Japanese Katakana Extended |
20297 | IBM EBCDIC - France |
20420 | IBM EBCDIC - Arabic |
20423 | IBM EBCDIC - Greek |
20424 | IBM EBCDIC - Hebrew |
20833 | IBM EBCDIC - Korean Extended |
20838 | IBM EBCDIC - Thai |
20866 | Russian - KOI8-R |
20871 | IBM EBCDIC - Icelandic |
20880 | IBM EBCDIC - Cyrillic (Russian) |
20905 | IBM EBCDIC - Turkish |
20924 | IBM EBCDIC - Latin-1/Open System (1047 + Euro symbol) |
20932 | JIS X 0208-1990 & 0121-1990 |
20936 | Simplified Chinese (GB2312) |
21025 | IBM EBCDIC - Cyrillic (Serbian, Bulgarian) |
21027 | Extended Alpha Lowercase |
21866 | Ukrainian (KOI8-U) |
28591 | ISO 8859-1 Latin I |
28592 | ISO 8859-2 Central Europe |
28593 | ISO 8859-3 Latin 3 |
28594 | ISO 8859-4 Baltic |
28595 | ISO 8859-5 Cyrillic |
28596 | ISO 8859-6 Arabic |
28597 | ISO 8859-7 Greek |
28598 | ISO 8859-8 Hebrew |
28599 | ISO 8859-9 Latin 5 |
28605 | ISO 8859-15 Latin 9 |
29001 | Europa 3 |
38598 | ISO 8859-8 Hebrew |
50220 | ISO 2022 Japanese with no halfwidth Katakana |
50221 | ISO 2022 Japanese with halfwidth Katakana |
50222 | ISO 2022 Japanese JIS X 0201-1989 |
50225 | ISO 2022 Korean |
50227 | ISO 2022 Simplified Chinese |
50229 | ISO 2022 Traditional Chinese |
50930 | Japanese (Katakana) Extended |
50931 | US/Canada and Japanese |
50933 | Korean Extended and Korean |
50935 | Simplified Chinese Extended and Simplified Chinese |
50936 | Simplified Chinese |
50937 | US/Canada and Traditional Chinese |
50939 | Japanese (Latin) Extended and Japanese |
51932 | EUC - Japanese |
51936 | EUC - Simplified Chinese |
51949 | EUC - Korean |
51950 | EUC - Traditional Chinese |
52936 | HZ-GB2312 Simplified Chinese |
54936 | Windows XP: GB18030 Simplified Chinese (4 Byte) |
57002 | ISCII Devanagari |
57003 | ISCII Bengali |
57004 | ISCII Tamil |
57005 | ISCII Telugu |
57006 | ISCII Assamese |
57007 | ISCII Oriya |
57008 | ISCII Kannada |
57009 | ISCII Malayalam |
57010 | ISCII Gujarati |
57011 | ISCII Punjabi |
65000 | Unicode UTF-7 |
65001 | Unicode UTF-8 |
Identifier | Name |
1 | ASCII |
2 | NEXTSTEP |
3 | JapaneseEUC |
4 | UTF8 |
5 | ISOLatin1 |
6 | Symbol |
7 | NonLossyASCII |
8 | ShiftJIS |
9 | ISOLatin2 |
10 | Unicode |
11 | WindowsCP1251 |
12 | WindowsCP1252 |
13 | WindowsCP1253 |
14 | WindowsCP1254 |
15 | WindowsCP1250 |
21 | ISO2022JP |
30 | MacOSRoman |
10 | UTF16String |
0x90000100 | UTF16BigEndian |
0x94000100 | UTF16LittleEndian |
0x8c000100 | UTF32String |
0x98000100 | UTF32BigEndian |
0x9c000100 | UTF32LittleEndian |
65536 | Proprietary |
- Product: The product the license is for.
- Product Key: The key the license was generated from.
- License Source: Where the license was found (e.g., RuntimeLicense, License File).
- License Type: The type of license installed (e.g., Royalty Free, Single Server).
- Last Valid Build: The last valid build number for which the license will work.
This setting only works on these cmdlets: AS3Receiver, AS3Sender, Atom, Client(3DS), FTP, FTPServer, IMAP, OFTPClient, SSHClient, SCP, Server(3DS), Sexec, SFTP, SFTPServer, SSHServer, TCPClient, TCPServer.
Setting this configuration setting to true tells the cmdlet to use the internal implementation instead of using the system security libraries.
On Windows, this setting is set to false by default. On Linux/macOS, this setting is set to true by default.
If using the .NET Standard Library, this setting will be true on all platforms. The .NET Standard library does not support using the system security libraries.
Note: This setting is static. The value set is applicable to all cmdlets used in the application.
When this value is set, the product's system dynamic link library (DLL) is no longer required as a reference, as all unmanaged code is stored in that file.