0

I'm trying to run a query in WSUS API via Powershell that outputs computer names, needed patches, etc, and then I need to inject that into a "log" file which gets ingested into Splunk so we can make dashboards etc.

My current code is

    $computerscope = New-Object Microsoft.UpdateServices.Administration.ComputerTargetScope
    $LogTime = Get-Date -Format "MM-dd-yyyy_hh-mm-ss"
    $updatescope = New-Object Microsoft.UpdateServices.Administration.UpdateScope
    $wsus.GetSummariesPerComputerTarget($updatescope,$computerscope) |
    Select-Object $logtime,@{L=’ComputerTarget';E={($wsus.GetComputerTarget([guid]$_.ComputerTargetId)).FullDomainName}},
    @{L=’NeededCount';E={($_.DownloadedCount + $_.NotInstalledCount)}},DownloadedCount,NotApplicableCount,NotInstalledCount,InstalledCount,FailedCount | Select-String Computer

Output comes out like this:

@{05-13-2016_05-12-25=; ComputerTarget=########; NeededCount=12; DownloadedCount=0; NotApplicableCount=82245; NotInstalledCount=12; InstalledCount=23; FailedCount=0}

I need it to look like this:

05-13-2016_05-12-25=; ComputerTarget=#######; NeededCount=12; DownloadedCount=0; NotApplicableCount=82245; NotInstalledCount=12; InstalledCount=23; FailedCount=0

If you want to try the root of the problem, I'm trying to convert a table into arrays so splunk can read it line by line but this gives a table which i'm trying to convert:

$computerscope = New-Object Microsoft.UpdateServices.Administration.ComputerTargetScope
$LogTime = Get-Date -Format "MM-dd-yyyy_hh-mm-ss"
$updatescope = New-Object Microsoft.UpdateServices.Administration.UpdateScope
$wsus.GetSummariesPerComputerTarget($updatescope,$computerscope) |
Select-Object $logtime,@{L=’ComputerTarget';E={($wsus.GetComputerTarget([guid]$_.ComputerTargetId)).FullDomainName}},
@{L=’NeededCount';E={($_.DownloadedCount + $_.NotInstalledCount)}},DownloadedCount,NotApplicableCount,NotInstalledCount,InstalledCount,FailedCount `

which gives output:

05-13-2016_05-16-04 : 
ComputerTarget      : ########
NeededCount         : 12
DownloadedCount     : 0
NotApplicableCount  : 82245
NotInstalledCount   : 12
InstalledCount      : 23
FailedCount         : 0
1
  • so all you need to do is to remove the @{ and } of your first example? May 13, 2016 at 21:27

1 Answer 1

0

It looks like you only want to remove the leading @{ and trailing } which you could do with regex like this:

...allyourcode... | Select-String Computer | ForEach-Object { $_.Line -replace '^\@\{(.*?)\}$', '$1' }

However, making Select-String convert your objects to string-representations is a bad way to export data. Splunk can read CSV-files, so I would recommend using that (and also use a real property for logtime). Ex:

$computerscope = New-Object Microsoft.UpdateServices.Administration.ComputerTargetScope
$LogTime = Get-Date -Format "MM-dd-yyyy_hh-mm-ss"
$updatescope = New-Object Microsoft.UpdateServices.Administration.UpdateScope
$wsus.GetSummariesPerComputerTarget($updatescope,$computerscope) |
Select-Object @{L="LogTime";e={ $logtime }},@{L=’ComputerTarget';E={($wsus.GetComputerTarget([guid]$_.ComputerTargetId)).FullDomainName}},
@{L=’NeededCount';E={($_.DownloadedCount + $_.NotInstalledCount)}},DownloadedCount,NotApplicableCount,NotInstalledCount,InstalledCount,FailedCount |
Export-Csv -Path mydata.csv -NoTypeInformation

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

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