63

I am searching for a simple command to see logged on users on server. I know this one :

Get-WmiObject -Class win32_computersystem

but this will not provide me the info I need. It returns : domain Manufactureer Model Name (Machine name) PrimaryOwnerName TotalPhysicalMemory

I run Powershell 3.0 on a Windows 2012 server.

Also

Get-WmiObject Win32_LoggedOnUser -ComputerName $Computer | Select Antecedent -Unique

gives me not the exact answers I need. I would love to see as well the idle time, or if they are active or away.

10 Answers 10

136

In search of this same solution, I found what I needed under a different question in stackoverflow: Powershell-log-off-remote-session. The below one line will return a list of logged on users.

query user /server:$SERVER
9
  • 5
    This is a much better solution than the accepted answer. The accepted answer gives you all the users that are running services and and applications, not active RDP sessions or console sessions. Feb 10, 2016 at 14:21
  • 3
    I would go ahead and agree that it is a better answer to the question, in that the OP wanted a simple command, and so I've upvoted it, but I was looking for more functionality and Google sent me here, so for my purposes, mjolinor's answer is more useful, so I've upvoted that one... hmmmm Mar 8, 2016 at 18:23
  • 1
    Brilliant and exactly what I was looking for! Jul 14, 2017 at 14:39
  • 1
    doesn't give you the machine name? Oct 19, 2017 at 13:50
  • 1
    This method does not list users, that are logged on via SSH (built-in OpenSSH). Mar 29, 2021 at 12:47
32

Since we're in the PowerShell area, it's extra useful if we can return a proper PowerShell object ...

I personally like this method of parsing, for the terseness:

((quser) -replace '^>', '') -replace '\s{2,}', ',' | ConvertFrom-Csv

Note: this doesn't account for disconnected ("disc") users, but works well if you just want to get a quick list of users and don't care about the rest of the information. I just wanted a list and didn't care if they were currently disconnected.

If you do care about the rest of the data it's just a little more complex:

(((quser) -replace '^>', '') -replace '\s{2,}', ',').Trim() | ForEach-Object {
    if ($_.Split(',').Count -eq 5) {
        Write-Output ($_ -replace '(^[^,]+)', '$1,')
    } else {
        Write-Output $_
    }
} | ConvertFrom-Csv

I take it a step farther and give you a very clean object on my blog.

I ended up making this into a module.

12
  • 3
    This needs more upvotes. Spent too long trying to get it to format the way I wanted.
    – KawaGreen
    Mar 15, 2018 at 10:00
  • 2
    Indeed, this is BRILLIANT!
    – Rakha
    Jun 13, 2018 at 11:50
  • quser is not recognized under PS. What's missing?
    – not2qubit
    May 1, 2020 at 13:02
  • @not2qubit, are you running on Windows? If so, check your path. quser is an executable: C:\WINDOWS\system32\quser.exe. You can also try query user, it returns the exact same output. query is also an executable: C:\WINDOWS\system32\query.exe
    – VertigoRay
    May 9, 2020 at 5:19
  • 1
    @not2qubit Like I said, it's not available on the Home SKUs. I have it available on Pro and Enterprise SKUs of Win10, and my brother confirmed that query user and quser are not available on Win10 1909 Home. Since you cannot RDP into a Home SKU, it's a bit irrelevant to run this command locally.
    – VertigoRay
    May 17, 2020 at 3:54
21

There's no "simple command" to do that. You can write a function, or take your choice of several that are available online in various code repositories. I use this:

function get-loggedonuser ($computername){

#mjolinor 3/17/10

$regexa = '.+Domain="(.+)",Name="(.+)"$'
$regexd = '.+LogonId="(\d+)"$'

$logontype = @{
"0"="Local System"
"2"="Interactive" #(Local logon)
"3"="Network" # (Remote logon)
"4"="Batch" # (Scheduled task)
"5"="Service" # (Service account logon)
"7"="Unlock" #(Screen saver)
"8"="NetworkCleartext" # (Cleartext network logon)
"9"="NewCredentials" #(RunAs using alternate credentials)
"10"="RemoteInteractive" #(RDP\TS\RemoteAssistance)
"11"="CachedInteractive" #(Local w\cached credentials)
}

$logon_sessions = @(gwmi win32_logonsession -ComputerName $computername)
$logon_users = @(gwmi win32_loggedonuser -ComputerName $computername)

$session_user = @{}

$logon_users |% {
$_.antecedent -match $regexa > $nul
$username = $matches[1] + "\" + $matches[2]
$_.dependent -match $regexd > $nul
$session = $matches[1]
$session_user[$session] += $username
}


$logon_sessions |%{
$starttime = [management.managementdatetimeconverter]::todatetime($_.starttime)

$loggedonuser = New-Object -TypeName psobject
$loggedonuser | Add-Member -MemberType NoteProperty -Name "Session" -Value $_.logonid
$loggedonuser | Add-Member -MemberType NoteProperty -Name "User" -Value $session_user[$_.logonid]
$loggedonuser | Add-Member -MemberType NoteProperty -Name "Type" -Value $logontype[$_.logontype.tostring()]
$loggedonuser | Add-Member -MemberType NoteProperty -Name "Auth" -Value $_.authenticationpackage
$loggedonuser | Add-Member -MemberType NoteProperty -Name "StartTime" -Value $starttime

$loggedonuser
}

}
14
  • 1
    I added the missing } in the end and changed the computername variable and set it to my hostname. But still i can't make this run. somehow it tries to use my machinename as cmdlet. If i explicitly Set-Variable -Name computername -Value “mymachinename” i get and RPC server is unavailable. I am still newbie, what do i miss? Apr 22, 2014 at 13:08
  • Sorry about the missing bracket (copy/paste fail). Fixed. Not sure why it's not working. After the function is loaded, you should be able to just run" get-loggedonuser <computername>. For the local machine, you can run: get-loggedonuser localhost
    – mjolinor
    Apr 22, 2014 at 13:29
  • still wasn't able to make it work. even if i replace the $computername directly using my machinename or localhost i didnt get any result. Is there a way to see the info of how long the user is logged in? Apr 24, 2014 at 14:38
  • 5
    Well, that's 30 seconds of my life I'll never get back.
    – mjolinor
    Oct 23, 2015 at 21:30
  • 1
    @mjolinor Hi Your script is working fine but on running the same it shows only my name i.e. {Session : 39648199 Type : Local System Auth : StartTime : 1/1/1601 5:30:00 AM}. I want to see how many users are currently logged in and are active (say in last 30 minutes), how can I do that ? Could you please help me with that ? Jun 23, 2016 at 7:03
13

Maybe you can do something with

get-process -includeusername
2
  • 6
    Like the lateral thinking. I know it isn't the "correct" answer, but it does present a potential workaround solution. Get-Process -IncludeUserName | Select-Object -Unique -Property UserName
    – Jaans
    Jun 5, 2017 at 1:46
  • It's clever (note that elevation is required for -IncludeUsername), but it isn't the same as the set of users that have (active or disconnected) window stations (desktop sessions); for instance, processes run with a different user identity in the window station of a given user or via a service show up separately, e.g. with runas.exe or PowerShell remoting sessions.
    – mklement0
    May 1 at 19:40
4

If you want to find interactively logged on users, I found a great tip here :https://p0w3rsh3ll.wordpress.com/2012/02/03/get-logged-on-users/ (Win32_ComputerSystem did not help me)

$explorerprocesses = @(Get-WmiObject -Query "Select * FROM Win32_Process WHERE Name='explorer.exe'" -ErrorAction SilentlyContinue)
If ($explorerprocesses.Count -eq 0)
{
    "No explorer process found / Nobody interactively logged on"
}
Else
{
    ForEach ($i in $explorerprocesses)
    {
        $Username = $i.GetOwner().User
        $Domain = $i.GetOwner().Domain
        Write-Host "$Domain\$Username logged on since: $($i.ConvertToDateTime($i.CreationDate))"
    }
}
2
2

Here is my Approach based on DarKalimHero's Suggestion by selecting only on Explorer.exe processes

Function Get-RdpSessions 
{
    param(
        [string]$computername 
    )

    $processinfo = Get-WmiObject -Query "select * from win32_process where name='explorer.exe'" -ComputerName $computername

    $processinfo | ForEach-Object { $_.GetOwner().User } | Sort-Object -Unique | ForEach-Object { New-Object psobject -Property @{Computer=$computername;LoggedOn=$_} } | Select-Object Computer,LoggedOn
}
1
  • Which would not work, if user's shell is NOT explorer.exe (sorry for stating the obvious).
    – AnrDaemon
    Mar 3, 2022 at 8:48
1

Another solution, also based on query user, but can handle variations in culture (as far as I can tell) and produces strongly-typed results (i.e. TimeSpan and DateTime values):

# Invoke "query user", it produces an output similar to this, but might be culture-dependant!
#
#  USERNAME              SESSIONNAME        ID  STATE   IDLE TIME  LOGON TIME
# >jantje                rdp-tcp#55          2  Active          .  3/29/2021 4:24 PM
#  pietje                                    4  Disc     49+01:01  4/14/2021 9:26 AM
$result = (&query 'user' | Out-String -Stream)

# Take the header text and insert a '|' before the start of every HEADER - although defined as inserting a bar after 
# every 2 or more spaces, or after the space at the start.
$fencedHeader = $result[0] -replace '(^\s|\s{2,})', '$1|'

# Now get the positions of all bars.
$fenceIndexes = ($fencedHeader | Select-String '\|' -AllMatches).Matches.Index

$timeSpanFormats = [string[]]@("d\+hh\:mm", "h\:mm", "m")
$entries = foreach($line in $result | Select-Object -Skip 1)
{
    # Insert bars on the same positions, and then split the line into separate parts using these bars.
    $fenceIndexes | ForEach-Object { $line = $line.Insert($_, "|") }
    $parts = $line -split '\|' | ForEach-Object { $_.Trim() }

    # Parse each part as a strongly typed value, using the UI Culture if needed.
    [PSCustomObject] @{
        IsCurrent   = ($parts[0] -eq '>');
        Username    = $parts[1];
        SessionName = $parts[2];
        Id          = [int]($parts[3]);
        State       = $parts[4];
        IdleTime    = $(if($parts[5] -ne '.') { [TimeSpan]::ParseExact($parts[5], $timeSpanFormats, [CultureInfo]::CurrentUICulture) } else { [TimeSpan]::Zero });
        LogonTime   = [DateTime]::ParseExact($parts[6], "g", [CultureInfo]::CurrentUICulture);
    }
}

# Yields the following result:
#
# IsCurrent Username SessionName Id State  IdleTime    LogonTime           
# --------- -------- ----------- -- -----  --------    ---------           
#      True jantje   rdp-tcp#32   2 Active 00:00:00    3/29/2021 4:24:00 PM
#     False pietje                4 Disc   48.11:06:00 4/14/2021 9:26:00 AM
$entries | Format-Table -AutoSize
3
  • On my system - no idle time is designated as "none" and your script breaks. PS C:\WINDOWS\system32> query user USERNAME SESSIONNAME ID STATE IDLE TIME LOGON TIME >some.user console 1 Active none 8/17/2021 5:32 AM Sorry - comment formatting won't show it as correctly formatted :( Aug 18, 2021 at 14:39
  • 1
    Ok, off the top of my head, you could try changing if($parts[5] -ne '.') into if(@('.', 'none') -notcontains $parts[5]) and see if that works? Aug 19, 2021 at 11:27
  • Changed it to: $(if($parts[5] -ne '.' -and $parts[5] -ne 'none') - All good - works for remote (although there is no "current" user in remote checking Aug 19, 2021 at 15:04
1

Team!

I have pretty nice solution to get local session as [PSObject].

Function Get-LocalSession {
<#
    .DESCRIPTION
        Get local session. Pasre output of command - 'query session'.
#>
    [OutputType([PSObject[]])]
    [CmdletBinding()]
    Param(
        
    )
    try {
        #region functions
        #endregion
        $Result = @()
        $Output = . query.exe 'session' | select-object -skip 1

        #use regex to parse
        $pattern = '^(?<This>.)(?<SessionName>[^\s]*)\s*(?<UserName>[a-z]\w*)?\s*(?<Id>[0-9]*)\s*(?<State>\w*)\s*((?<Type>\w*)\s*)?(?<Device>\w*)?'

        foreach ( $line in $output ){
            $match = [regex]::Matches( $line, $pattern )
            if ( $match ){
                $PSO = [PSCustomObject]@{
                    This        = $match[0].groups['This'].Value
                    SessionName = $match[0].groups['SessionName'].Value
                    UserName    = $match[0].groups['UserName'].Value
                    Id          = $match[0].groups['Id'].Value
                    State       = $match[0].groups['State'].Value
                    Type        = $match[0].groups['Type'].Value
                    Device      = $match[0].groups['Device'].Value
                }

                $Result += $PSO
            }
            Else {
                write-host "Unable to process line [$line] in function [Get-LocalSession]!"
            }
        }  
    }
    catch {
        #Get-ErrorReporting -Trap $PSItem
        write-host $PSItem
    }

    return $Result
}

#Run it

$SessionObject = Get-LocalSession
$SessionObject | format-table -autosize -property *


1

I have edited mjolinor script to remove duplicate records, and dummy account names such as system, network services,...etc
If you want to get all users

function get-loggedonuser ($computername){

$regexa = '.+Domain="(.+)",Name="(.+)"$'
$regexd = '.+LogonId="(\d+)"$'

$logontype = @{
"0"="Local System"
"2"="Interactive" #(Local logon)
"3"="Network" # (Remote logon)
"4"="Batch" # (Scheduled task)
"5"="Service" # (Service account logon)
"7"="Unlock" #(Screen saver)
"8"="NetworkCleartext" # (Cleartext network logon)
"9"="NewCredentials" #(RunAs using alternate credentials)
"10"="RemoteInteractive" #(RDP\TS\RemoteAssistance)
"11"="CachedInteractive" #(Local w\cached credentials)
}

$logon_sessions = @(gwmi win32_logonsession -ComputerName $computername)
$logon_users = @(gwmi win32_loggedonuser -ComputerName $computername)

$session_user = @{}

$logon_users |% {
$_.antecedent -match $regexa > $nul
$username = $matches[1] + "\" + $matches[2]
$_.dependent -match $regexd > $nul
$session = $matches[1]
$session_user[$session] += $username
}


$logon_sessions |%{
$starttime = [management.managementdatetimeconverter]::todatetime($_.starttime)
if ($session_user[$_.logonid] -notin $loggedonuser.user -and $session_user[$_.logonid] -notlike "*$*"){
$loggedonuser = New-Object -TypeName psobject
$loggedonuser | Add-Member -MemberType NoteProperty -Name "Session" -Value $_.logonid
$loggedonuser | Add-Member -MemberType NoteProperty -Name "User" -Value $session_user[$_.logonid]
$loggedonuser | Add-Member -MemberType NoteProperty -Name "Type" -Value $logontype[$_.logontype.tostring()]
$loggedonuser | Add-Member -MemberType NoteProperty -Name "Auth" -Value $_.authenticationpackage
$loggedonuser | Add-Member -MemberType NoteProperty -Name "StartTime" -Value $starttime

$loggedonuser
}
}

}

if you want to have only domain users

function get-loggedonuser ($computername){

    $HST= hostname
    $regexa = '.+Domain="(.+)",Name="(.+)"$'
    $regexd = '.+LogonId="(\d+)"$'
    
    $logontype = @{
    "0"="Local System"
    "2"="Interactive" #(Local logon)
    "3"="Network" # (Remote logon)
    "4"="Batch" # (Scheduled task)
    "5"="Service" # (Service account logon)
    "7"="Unlock" #(Screen saver)
    "8"="NetworkCleartext" # (Cleartext network logon)
    "9"="NewCredentials" #(RunAs using alternate credentials)
    "10"="RemoteInteractive" #(RDP\TS\RemoteAssistance)
    "11"="CachedInteractive" #(Local w\cached credentials)
    }
    
    $logon_sessions = @(Get-WmiObject win32_logonsession -ComputerName $computername)
    $logon_users = @(Get-WmiObject win32_loggedonuser -ComputerName $computername)
    
    $session_user = @{}
    
    $logon_users |ForEach-Object {
    $_.antecedent -match $regexa > $nul
    $username = $matches[1] + "\" + $matches[2]
    $_.dependent -match $regexd > $nul
    $session = $matches[1]
    $session_user[$session] += $username
    }
    
    
    $logon_sessions |ForEach-Object{
    if ($session_user[$_.logonid] -notin $loggedonuser.user -and $session_user[$_.logonid] -notlike "*$*" -and $session_user[$_.logonid] -notlike "*$HST*"){
    $loggedonuser = New-Object -TypeName psobject
    $loggedonuser | Add-Member -MemberType NoteProperty -Name "Session" -Value $_.logonid
    $loggedonuser | Add-Member -MemberType NoteProperty -Name "User" -Value $session_user[$_.logonid]
    $loggedonuser | Add-Member -MemberType NoteProperty -Name "Type" -Value $logontype[$_.logontype.tostring()]
    $loggedonuser | Add-Member -MemberType NoteProperty -Name "Auth" -Value $_.authenticationpackage
    $loggedonuser | Add-Member -MemberType NoteProperty -Name "StartTime" -Value $starttime
    
    $loggedonuser
    }
    }
    
    }
0

This is what I just figured out and works out great!

Get-Process -IncludeUserName | Select-Object -Unique | Where-Object {$_.UserName -notlike 'NT AUTHORITY\SYSTEM' -and $_.UserName -notlike 'NT AUTHORITY\NETWORK SERVICE' -and $_.UserName -notlike 'NT AUTHORITY\LOCAL SERVICE'} | Format-Table -Wrap -AutoSize
1
  • Note that this requires Admin rights in order to run
    – T-Heron
    Dec 30, 2021 at 17:51

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