This post is part of the series on PowerShell Snippets.
In this last post, in this series, I showed a PowerShell snippet which would prompt a user for input. This is fine if you are prompting for a username, filename, version tag or similar, but if you are prompting for a password, you would not want to expose to people watching over the users shoulder.
The Read-Host
cmdlet has a parameter…
Continue Reading azurecurve’s Article on their blog
PowerShell Snippets: Prompt User for Password
This post is part of the series on PowerShell Snippets. In this last post, in this series, I showed a PowerShell snippet which would prompt a user for input. This is fine if you are prompting for a username, filename, version tag or similar, but if you are prompting for a password, you would not want to expose to people watching over the users shoulder.
Blog Syndicated with azurecurve’s Permission
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