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AWS Tools for PowerShell 6

You're reading from   AWS Tools for PowerShell 6 Administrate, maintain, and automate your infrastructure with ease

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Product type Paperback
Published in Aug 2017
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781785884078
Length 372 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Tools
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Author (1):
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Ramesh Waghmare Ramesh Waghmare
Author Profile Icon Ramesh Waghmare
Ramesh Waghmare
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Toc

Table of Contents (17) Chapters Close

Preface 1. PowerShell Essentials FREE CHAPTER 2. The AWS Overview 3. Installing PowerShell Core and AWS Tools 4. AWS Identity and Access Management 5. AWS Virtual Private Cloud 6. AWS Elastic Compute Cloud 7. AWS Simple Storage Service 8. Elastic Load Balancer 9. Auto Scaling 10. Laying Foundation for RDS Databases 11. DB Instance Administration and Management 12. Working with RDS Read Replicas 13. AWS Elastic Beanstalk 14. AWS CloudFormation 15. AWS CloudWatch 16. AWS Resource Auditing

Comment-based help

Another very important thing in PowerShell that you must know is that you can build the script with in-built help. There are no separate files that you need to maintain for your script. This is an amazing capability. There are two ways that you can write help lines in your PowerShell Script. You can either use a hash (#) in the line to indicate it's a help, or you can make use of the <#..#> block level comment. Let's use the following script to continue the discussion:

I specified a block level comment in <#..#> with some other interesting things. Once the parsing engine sees the block of lines inside <#..#>, it starts ignoring the text and knows that it is help comment. But pay special attention to the lines inside that block, which are started with a dot (.). It has a special meaning in PowerShell. PowerShell starts building your help file once it sees this dot. This is extremely helpful in PowerShell when you build a complex script that can be used by others. There is no need to maintain a separate help file. It is just like the help you seek for any other cmdlet available in PowerShell. You can simply now type the following and see the magic:

PS C:\>Get-Help .\PS_Comment.ps1 -detailed

So, you just built a help file that looks like the cmdlet help.

You have been reading a chapter from
AWS Tools for PowerShell 6
Published in: Aug 2017
Publisher:
ISBN-13: 9781785884078
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