HowTo Install Microsoft PowerShell: Difference between revisions
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sudo dnf install -y powershell; | sudo dnf install -y powershell; | ||
<span style="color: green;"># Or Instead Install the Latest PowerShell Preview Version</span> | <span style="color: green;"># Or Instead Install the Latest PowerShell Preview Version</span> | ||
sudo dnf install -y powershell-preview; | sudo dnf install -y powershell-preview; | ||
<span style="color: green;"># Start PowerShell</span> | <span style="color: green;"># Start PowerShell</span> | ||
pwsh; | pwsh; |
Revision as of 07:59, 5 July 2018
Overview
PowerShell is built on the .NET Framework, PowerShell is a task-based command-line shell and scripting language; it is designed specifically for system administrators and power-users, to rapidly automate the administration of multiple operating systems (Linux, macOS, Unix, and Windows) and the processes related to the applications that run on those operating systems.
Learning PowerShell
Whether you're a Developer, a DevOps or an IT Professional, this doc will help you getting started with PowerShell. In this document we'll cover the following: installing PowerShell, samples walkthrough, PowerShell editor, debugger, testing tools and a map book for experienced bash users to get started with PowerShell faster.
PowerShell Installation Instructions
PowerShell Core, for Linux, is published to package repositories for easy installation (and updates). Below is the preferred method for installation for the "nst" sudo user:
# Register the Microsoft signature key sudo rpm --import https://packages.microsoft.com/keys/microsoft.asc; # Register the Microsoft RedHat repository curl https://packages.microsoft.com/config/rhel/7/prod.repo | sudo tee /etc/yum.repos.d/microsoft.repo; # Update the list of products sudo dnf update; # Install a system component sudo dnf install compat-openssl10; # Install PowerShell sudo dnf install -y powershell;
# Or Instead Install the Latest PowerShell Preview Version sudo dnf install -y powershell-preview; # Start PowerShell pwsh;