commands

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Get-DbaForceNetworkEncryption

Author Chrissy LeMaire (@cl), netnerds.net
Availability Windows, Linux, macOS

 

Want to see the source code for this command? Check out Get-DbaForceNetworkEncryption on GitHub.
Want to see the Bill Of Health for this command? Check out Get-DbaForceNetworkEncryption.

Synopsis

Gets Force Encryption settings for a SQL Server instance

Description

Gets Force Encryption settings for a SQL Server instance. Note that this requires access to the Windows Server - not the SQL instance itself.

This setting is found in Configuration Manager.

Syntax

Get-DbaForceNetworkEncryption
    [[-SqlInstance] <DbaInstanceParameter[]>]
    [[-Credential] <PSCredential>]
    [-EnableException]
    [<CommonParameters>]

 

Examples

 

Example: 1
PS C:\> Get-DbaForceNetworkEncryption

Gets Force Encryption properties on the default (MSSQLSERVER) instance on localhost - requires (and checks for) RunAs admin.

Example: 2
PS C:\> Get-DbaForceNetworkEncryption -SqlInstance sql01\SQL2008R2SP2

Gets Force Network Encryption for the SQL2008R2SP2 on sql01. Uses Windows Credentials to both login and view the registry.

Optional Parameters

-SqlInstance

The target SQL Server instance or instances. Defaults to localhost.

Alias
Required False
Pipeline true (ByValue)
Default Value $env:COMPUTERNAME
-Credential

Allows you to login to the computer (not sql instance) using alternative Windows credentials

Alias
Required False
Pipeline false
Default Value
-EnableException

By default, when something goes wrong we try to catch it, interpret it and give you a friendly warning message.
This avoids overwhelming you with "sea of red" exceptions, but is inconvenient because it basically disables advanced scripting.
Using this switch turns this "nice by default" feature off and enables you to catch exceptions with your own try/catch.

Alias
Required False
Pipeline false
Default Value False