Tell me more ×
Stack Overflow is a question and answer site for professional and enthusiast programmers. It's 100% free, no registration required.

Background: Assume I use the following powershell script from my local machine to automatically map some network drives.

$net = $(New-Object -ComObject WScript.Network);
$net.MapNetworkDrive("p:", "\\papabox\files");

$net = $(New-Object -ComObject WScript.Network);
$net.MapNetworkDrive("q:", "\\quebecbox\files");

## problem -- this one does not work because my username/password
## is different on romeobox
$net = $(New-Object -ComObject WScript.Network);
$net.MapNetworkDrive("r:", "\\romeobox\files");

Question: How do I modify the script so that I can also connect to romeobox, even though my username/password on romeobox is different from that of the other two boxes?

share|improve this question

4 Answers

up vote 19 down vote accepted
$net = new-object -ComObject WScript.Network
$net.MapNetworkDrive("r:", "\\romeobox\files", $false, "domain\user", "password")

Should do the trick,

Kindness,

Dan

share|improve this answer

If you need a way to store the password without putting it in plain text in your script or a data file, you can use the DPAPI to protect the password so you can store it safely in a file and retrieve it later as plain text e.g.:

# Stick password into DPAPI storage once - accessible only by current user
Add-Type -assembly System.Security
$passwordBytes = [System.Text.Encoding]::Unicode.GetBytes("Open Sesame")
$entropy = [byte[]](1,2,3,4,5)
$encrytpedData = [System.Security.Cryptography.ProtectedData]::Protect( `
                       $passwordBytes, $entropy, 'CurrentUser')
$encrytpedData | Set-Content -enc byte .\password.bin

# Retrieve and decrypted password
$encrytpedData = Get-Content -enc byte .\password.bin
$unencrytpedData = [System.Security.Cryptography.ProtectedData]::Unprotect( `
                       $encrytpedData, $entropy, 'CurrentUser')
$password = [System.Text.Encoding]::Unicode.GetString($unencrytpedData)
$password
share|improve this answer
+1 Good stuff; thanks for the info, Keith – Daniel Elliott Oct 8 '09 at 11:17

Came here looking for how to map drives using PowerShell?

There's a simpler way with PowerShell3.0. New-PSDrive has been updated with the -persist option. E.g.

New-PSDrive -Name U -PSProvider FileSystem -Root \\yourserver\your\folder -Credential yourdomain\username -Persist

In the past, New-PSDrive affected only the current PowerShell session. -persist causes the mapping to be registered with the O/S, as it were. See New-PSDrive

To answer the original question, you can vary the credentials used. Using -Credential to vary the domain\username causes Windows to prompt for a password. Another alternative is to pass a PSCredential object as in the example below. See Get-Credential for more detail.

PS C:\> $User = "mydomain\username"
PS C:\> $PWord = ConvertTo-SecureString -String "mypassword" -AsPlainText -Force
PS C:\> $Credential = New-Object -TypeName System.Management.Automation.PSCredential -ArgumentList $User, $PWord
PS C:\> New-PSDrive -Name U -PSProvider FileSystem -Root \\domain\some\folder -Credential $Credential -Persist  
share|improve this answer

This should work:

$net = $(New-Object -ComObject WScript.Network)
$net.MapNetworkDrive("r:", "\\romeobox\files",,"username","password")
share|improve this answer
Thanks, just a note: the missing parameter before "username" caused PS to complain. Other than that it works! – dreftymac Oct 7 '09 at 10:56

Your Answer

 
discard

By posting your answer, you agree to the privacy policy and terms of service.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.