The post of Scott inspired me to write a very small C# / .Net console application, that uses System.Management. You can name the adapter, that you want to restart, as a command line parameter. The code shows some basics about handling devices, that could be useful for others too.
using System;
using System.Management;
namespace ResetNetworkAdapter
{
class Program
{
static void Main(string[] args)
{
if (args.Length != 1)
{
Console.WriteLine("ResetNetworkAdapter [adapter name]");
Console.WriteLine("disables and re-enables (restarts) network adapters containing [adapter name] in their name");
return;
}
// commandline parameter is a string to be contained in the searched network adapter name
string AdapterNameLike = args[0];
// get network adapter node
SelectQuery query = new SelectQuery("Win32_NetworkAdapter");
ManagementObjectSearcher searcher = new ManagementObjectSearcher(query);
ManagementObjectCollection adapters = searcher.Get();
// enumerate all network adapters
foreach (ManagementObject adapter in adapters)
{
// find the matching adapter
string Name = (string)adapter.Properties["Name"].Value;
if (Name.ToLower().Contains(AdapterNameLike.ToLower()))
{
// disable and re-enable the adapter
adapter.InvokeMethod("Disable", null);
adapter.InvokeMethod("Enable", null);
}
}
}
}
}