Disconnect-PSSession
Disconnects from a session.
Syntax
Disconnect-PSSession
[-Session] <PSSession[]>
[-IdleTimeoutSec <Int32>]
[-OutputBufferingMode <OutputBufferingMode>]
[-ThrottleLimit <Int32>]
[-WhatIf]
[-Confirm]
[<CommonParameters>]
Disconnect-PSSession
[-IdleTimeoutSec <Int32>]
[-OutputBufferingMode <OutputBufferingMode>]
[-ThrottleLimit <Int32>]
-Name <String[]>
[-WhatIf]
[-Confirm]
[<CommonParameters>]
Disconnect-PSSession
[-IdleTimeoutSec <Int32>]
[-OutputBufferingMode <OutputBufferingMode>]
[-ThrottleLimit <Int32>]
-InstanceId <Guid[]>
[-WhatIf]
[-Confirm]
[<CommonParameters>]
Disconnect-PSSession
[-IdleTimeoutSec <Int32>]
[-OutputBufferingMode <OutputBufferingMode>]
[-ThrottleLimit <Int32>]
[-Id] <Int32[]>
[-WhatIf]
[-Confirm]
[<CommonParameters>]
Description
The Disconnect-PSSession
cmdlet disconnects a PowerShell session (PSSession), such as one
started by using the New-PSSession
cmdlet, from the current session. As a result, the
PSSession is in a disconnected state. You can connect to the disconnected PSSession from the
current session or from another session on the local computer or a different computer.
The Disconnect-PSSession
cmdlet disconnects only open PSSessions that are connected to the
current session. Disconnect-PSSession
cannot disconnect broken or closed PSSessions, or
interactive PSSessions started by using the Enter-PSSession
cmdlet, and it cannot disconnect
PSSessions that are connected to other sessions.
To reconnect to a disconnected PSSession, use the Connect-PSSession
or Receive-PSSession
cmdlets.
When a PSSession is disconnected, the commands in the PSSession continue to run until they
complete, unless the PSSession times out or the commands in the PSSession are blocked by a
full output buffer. To change the idle timeout, use the IdleTimeoutSec parameter. To change the
output buffering mode, use the OutputBufferingMode parameter You can also use the
InDisconnectedSession parameter of the Invoke-Command
cmdlet to run a command in a
disconnected session.
For more information about the Disconnected Sessions feature, see about_Remote_Disconnected_Sessions.
This cmdlet is introduced in Windows PowerShell 3.0.
Examples
Example 1 - Disconnect a session by name
This command disconnects the UpdateSession
PSSession on the Server01 computer from the current
session. The command uses the Name parameter to identify the PSSession.
PS> Disconnect-PSSession -Name UpdateSession
Id Name ComputerName State ConfigurationName Availability
-- ---- ------------ ----- ----------------- ------------
1 UpdateSession Server01 Disconnected Microsoft.PowerShell None
The output shows that the attempt to disconnect was successful. The session state is Disconnected
and the Availability is None
, which indicates that the session is not busy and can be
reconnected.
Example 2 - Disconnect a session from a specific computer
This command disconnects the ITTask
PSSession on the Server12 computer from the current
session. The ITTask
session was created in the current session and connects to the Server12
computer. The command uses the Get-PSSession
cmdlet to get the session and the
Disconnect-PSSession
cmdlet to disconnect it.
PS> Get-PSSession -ComputerName Server12 -Name ITTask |
Disconnect-PSSession -OutputBufferingMode Drop -IdleTimeoutSec 86400
Id Name ComputerName State ConfigurationName Availability
-- ---- ------------ ----- ----------------- ------------
1 ITTask Server12 Disconnected ITTasks None
The Disconnect-PSSession
command uses the OutputBufferingMode parameter to set the output
mode to Drop
. This setting ensures that the script that is running in the session can continue
to run even if the session output buffer is full. Because the script writes its output to a report
on a file share, other output can be lost without consequence.
The command also uses the IdleTimeoutSec parameter to extend the idle timeout of the session to 24 hours. This setting allows time for this administrator or other administrators to reconnect to the session to verify that the script ran and troubleshoot if needed.
Example 3 - Using multiple PSSessions on multiple computers
This series of commands shows how the Disconnect-PSSession
cmdlet might be used in an enterprise
scenario. In this case, a new technician starts a script in a session on a remote computer and runs
into a problem. The technician disconnects from the session so that a more experienced manager can
connect to the session and resolve the problem.
PS> $s = New-PSSession -ComputerName Srv1, Srv2, Srv30 -Name ITTask
PS> Invoke-Command $s -FilePath \\Server01\Scripts\Get-PatchStatus.ps1
PS> Get-PSSession -Name ITTask -ComputerName Srv1 | Disconnect-PSSession
Id Name ComputerName State ConfigurationName Availability
-- ---- ------------ ----- ----------------- ------------
1 ITTask Srv1 Disconnected Microsoft.PowerShell None
PS> Get-PSSession -ComputerName Srv1, Srv2, Srv30 -Name ITTask
Id Name ComputerName State ConfigurationName Availability
-- ---- ------------ ----- ----------------- ------------
1 ITTask Srv1 Disconnected Microsoft.PowerShell None
2 ITTask Srv2 Opened Microsoft.PowerShell Available
3 ITTask Srv30 Opened Microsoft.PowerShell Available
PS> Get-PSSession -ComputerName Srv1 -Name ITTask -Credential Domain01\User01
Id Name ComputerName State ConfigurationName Availability
-- ---- ------------ ----- ----------------- ------------
1 ITTask Srv1 Disconnected Microsoft.PowerShell None
PS> $s = Connect-PSSession -ComputerName Srv1 -Name ITTask -Credential Domain01\User01
PS> Invoke-Command -Session $s {dir $HOME\Scripts\PatchStatusOutput.ps1}
PS> Invoke-Command -Session $s {mkdir $HOME\Scripts\PatchStatusOutput}
PS> Invoke-Command -Session $s -FilePath \\Server01\Scripts\Get-PatchStatus.ps1
PS> Disconnect-PSSession -Session $s
The technician begins by creating sessions on several remote computers and running a script in each
session. The first command uses the New-PSSession
cmdlet to create the ITTask
session on three
remote computers. The command saves the sessions in the $s
variable. The second command uses the
FilePath parameter of the Invoke-Command
cmdlet to run a script in the sessions in the $s
variable.
The script running on the Srv1 computer generates unexpected errors. The technician contacts his
manager and asks for assistance. The manager directs the technician to disconnect from the session
so he can investigate.The second command uses the Get-PSSession
cmdlet to get the ITTask
session
on the Srv1 computer and the Disconnect-PSSession
cmdlet to disconnect it. This command does not
affect the ITTask
sessions on the other computers.
The third command uses the Get-PSSession
cmdlet to get the ITTask
sessions. The output shows
that the ITTask
sessions on the Srv2 and Srv30 computers were not affected by the command to
disconnect.
The manager logs on to his home computer, connects to his corporate network, starts PowerShell, and
uses the Get-PSSession
cmdlet to get the ITTask
session on the Srv1 computer. He uses the
credentials of the technician to access the session.
Next, the manager uses the Connect-PSSession
cmdlet to connect to the ITTask
session on the Srv1
computer. The command saves the session in the $s
variable.
The manager uses the Invoke-Command
cmdlet to run some diagnostic commands in the session in the
$s
variable. He recognizes that the script failed because it did not find a required directory.
The manager uses the MkDir
function to create the directory, and then he restarts the
Get-PatchStatus.ps1
script and disconnects from the session.The manager reports his findings to
the technician, suggests that he reconnect to the session to complete the tasks, and asks him to
add a command to the Get-PatchStatus.ps1
script that creates the required directory if it does
not exist.
Example 4 - Change the timeout value for a PSSession
This example shows how to correct the value of the IdleTimeout property of a session so that it can be disconnected.
The idle timeout property of a session is critical to disconnected sessions, because it determines
how long a disconnected session is maintained before it is deleted. You can set the idle timeout
option when you create a session and when you disconnect it. The default values for the idle
timeout of a session are set in the $PSSessionOption
preference variable on the local computer
and in the session configuration on the remote computer. Values set for the session take precedence
over values set in the session configuration, but session values cannot exceed quotas set in the
session configuration, such as the MaxIdleTimeoutMs value.
PS> $Timeout = New-PSSessionOption -IdleTimeout 172800000
PS> $s = New-PSSession -Computer Server01 -Name ITTask -SessionOption $Timeout
PS> Disconnect-PSSession -Session $s
Disconnect-PSSession : The session ITTask cannot be disconnected because the specified
idle timeout value 172800(seconds) is either greater than the server maximum allowed
43200 (seconds) or less that the minimum allowed60(seconds). Choose an idle time out
value that is within the allowed range and try again.
PS> Invoke-Command -ComputerName Server01 {Get-PSSessionConfiguration Microsoft.PowerShell} |
Format-List -Property *
Architecture : 64
Filename : %windir%\system32\pwrshplugin.dll
ResourceUri : http://schemas.microsoft.com/powershell/microsoft.powershell
MaxConcurrentCommandsPerShell : 1000
UseSharedProcess : false
ProcessIdleTimeoutSec : 0
xmlns : http://schemas.microsoft.com/wbem/wsman/1/config/PluginConfiguration
MaxConcurrentUsers : 5
lang : en-US
SupportsOptions : true
ExactMatch : true
RunAsUser :
IdleTimeoutms : 7200000
PSVersion : 3.0
OutputBufferingMode : Block
AutoRestart : false
SecurityDescriptorSddl : O:NSG:BAD:P(A;;GA;;;BA)S:P(AU;FA;GA;;;WD)(AU;SA;GXGW;;;WD)
MaxMemoryPerShellMB : 1024
MaxIdleTimeoutms : 2147483647
Uri : http://schemas.microsoft.com/powershell/microsoft.powershell
SDKVersion : 2
Name : microsoft.powershell
XmlRenderingType : text
Capability : {Shell}
RunAsPassword :
MaxProcessesPerShell : 15
ParentResourceUri : http://schemas.microsoft.com/powershell/microsoft.powershell
Enabled : true
MaxShells : 25
MaxShellsPerUser : 25
Permission : BUILTIN\Administrators AccessAllowed
PSComputerName : localhost
RunspaceId : aea84310-6dbf-4c21-90ac-13980039925a
PSShowComputerName : True
PS> $s.Runspace.ConnectionInfo
ConnectionUri : http://Server01/wsman
ComputerName : Server01
Scheme : http
Port : 80
AppName : /wsman
Credential :
ShellUri : http://schemas.microsoft.com/powershell/Microsoft.PowerShell
AuthenticationMechanism : Default
CertificateThumbprint :
MaximumConnectionRedirectionCount : 5
MaximumReceivedDataSizePerCommand :
MaximumReceivedObjectSize : 209715200
UseCompression : True
NoMachineProfile : False
ProxyAccessType : None
ProxyAuthentication : Negotiate
ProxyCredential :
SkipCACheck : False
SkipCNCheck : False
SkipRevocationCheck : False
NoEncryption : False
UseUTF16 : False
OutputBufferingMode : Drop
IncludePortInSPN : False
Culture : en-US
UICulture : en-US
OpenTimeout : 180000
CancelTimeout : 60000
OperationTimeout : 180000
IdleTimeout : 172800000
PS> Disconnect-PSSession $s -IdleTimeoutSec 43200
Id Name ComputerName State ConfigurationName Availability
-- ---- ------------ ----- ----------------- ------------
4 ITTask Server01 Disconnected Microsoft.PowerShell None
PS> $s.Runspace.ConnectionInfo.IdleTimeout
43200000
The first command uses the New-PSSessionOption
cmdlet to create a session option object. It uses
the IdleTimeout parameter to set an idle timeout of 48 hours (172800000
milliseconds). The
command saves the session option object in the $Timeout
variable.
The second command uses the New-PSSession
cmdlet to create the ITTask
session on the Server01
computer. The command save the session in the $s
variable. The value of the SessionOption
parameter is the 48-hour idle timeout in the $Timeout
variable.
The third command disconnects the ITTask
session in the $s
variable. The command fails because
the idle timeout value of the session exceeds the MaxIdleTimeoutMs quota in the session
configuration. Because the idle timeout is not used until the session is disconnected, this
violation can go undetected while the session is in use.
The fourth command uses the Invoke-Command
cmdlet to run a Get-PSSessionConfiguration
command
for the Microsoft.PowerShell
session configuration on the Server01 computer. The command uses the
Format-List
cmdlet to display all properties of the session configuration in a list.The output
shows that the MaxIdleTimeoutMS property, which establishes the maximum permitted
IdleTimeout value for sessions that use the session configuration, is 43200000
milliseconds
(12 hours).
The fifth command gets the session option values of the session in the $s
variable. The values of
many session options are properties of the ConnectionInfo property of the Runspace property
of the session.The output shows that the value of the IdleTimeout property of the session is
172800000
milliseconds (48 hours), which violates the MaxIdleTimeoutMs quota of 12 hours in
the session configuration.To resolve this conflict, you can use the ConfigurationName parameter
to select a different session configuration or use the IdleTimeout parameter to reduce the idle
timeout of the session.
The sixth command disconnects the session. It uses the IdleTimeoutSec parameter to set the idle timeout to the 12-hour maximum.
The seventh command gets the value of the IdleTimeout property of the disconnected session, which is measured in milliseconds. The output confirms that the command was successful.
Parameters
-Confirm
Prompts you for confirmation before running the cmdlet.
Type: | SwitchParameter |
Aliases: | cf |
Position: | Named |
Default value: | False |
Required: | False |
Accept pipeline input: | False |
Accept wildcard characters: | False |
-Id
Disconnects from sessions with the specified session ID. Type one or more IDs (separated by
commas), or use the range operator (..
) to specify a range of IDs.
To get the ID of a session, use the Get-PSSession
cmdlet. The instance ID is stored in the ID
property of the session.
Type: | Int32[] |
Position: | 1 |
Default value: | None |
Required: | True |
Accept pipeline input: | True |
Accept wildcard characters: | False |
-IdleTimeoutSec
Changes the idle timeout value of the disconnected PSSession. Enter a value in seconds. The
minimum value is 60
(1 minute).
The idle timeout determines how long the disconnected PSSession is maintained on the remote computer. When the timeout expires, the PSSession is deleted.
Disconnected PSSessions are considered to be idle from the moment that they are disconnected, even if commands are running in the disconnected session.
The default value for the idle timeout of a session is set by the value of the IdleTimeoutMs
property of the session configuration. The default value is 7200000
milliseconds (2 hours).
The value of this parameter takes precedence over the value of the IdleTimeout property of the
$PSSessionOption
preference variable and the default idle timeout value in the session
configuration. However, this value cannot exceed the value of the MaxIdleTimeoutMs property of
the session configuration. The default value of MaxIdleTimeoutMs is 12 hours (43200000
milliseconds).
Type: | Int32 |
Position: | Named |
Default value: | 60 |
Required: | False |
Accept pipeline input: | False |
Accept wildcard characters: | False |
-InstanceId
Disconnects from sessions with the specified instance IDs.
The instance ID is a GUID that uniquely identifies a session on a local or remote computer. The instance ID is unique, even across multiple sessions on multiple computers.
To get the instance ID of a session, use the Get-PSSession
cmdlet. The instance ID is stored in
the InstanceID property of the session.
Type: | Guid[] |
Position: | Named |
Default value: | None |
Required: | True |
Accept pipeline input: | True |
Accept wildcard characters: | False |
-Name
Disconnects from sessions with the specified friendly names. Wildcards are permitted.
To get the friendly name of a session, use the Get-PSSession
cmdlet. The friendly name is stored
in the Name property of the session.
Type: | String[] |
Position: | Named |
Default value: | None |
Required: | True |
Accept pipeline input: | True |
Accept wildcard characters: | True |
-OutputBufferingMode
Determines how command output is managed in the disconnected session when the output buffer is
full. The default value is Block
.
If the command in the disconnected session is returning output and the output buffer fills, the
value of this parameter effectively determines whether the command continues to run while the
session is disconnected. A value of Block
suspends the command until the session is reconnected. A
value of Drop
allows the command to complete, although data might be lost. When using the Drop
value, redirect the command output to a file on disk.
Valid values are:
Block
: When the output buffer is full, execution is suspended until the buffer is clear.Drop
: When the output buffer is full, execution continues. As new output is saved, the oldest output is discarded.None
: No output buffering mode is specified. The value of the OutputBufferingMode property of the session configuration is used for the disconnected session.
Type: | OutputBufferingMode |
Position: | Named |
Default value: | Block |
Required: | False |
Accept pipeline input: | False |
Accept wildcard characters: | False |
-Session
Disconnects from the specified PSSessions. Enter PSSession objects, such as those that the
New-PSSession
cmdlet returns. You can also pipe a PSSession object to Disconnect-PSSession
.
The Get-PSSession
cmdlet can get all PSSessions that terminate at a remote computer, including
PSSessions that are disconnected and PSSessions that are connected to other sessions on
other computers. Disconnect-PSSession
disconnects only PSSession that are connected to the
current session. If you pipe other PSSessions to Disconnect-PSSession
, the
Disconnect-PSSession
command fails.
Type: | PSSession[] |
Position: | 1 |
Default value: | None |
Required: | True |
Accept pipeline input: | True |
Accept wildcard characters: | False |
-ThrottleLimit
Sets the throttle limit for the Disconnect-PSSession
command.
The throttle limit is the maximum number of concurrent connections that can be established to run
this command. If you omit this parameter or enter a value of 0
, the default value, 32
, is used.
The throttle limit applies only to the current command, not to the session or to the computer.
Type: | Int32 |
Position: | Named |
Default value: | 32 |
Required: | False |
Accept pipeline input: | False |
Accept wildcard characters: | False |
-WhatIf
Shows what would happen if the cmdlet runs. The cmdlet is not run.
Type: | SwitchParameter |
Aliases: | wi |
Position: | Named |
Default value: | False |
Required: | False |
Accept pipeline input: | False |
Accept wildcard characters: | False |
Inputs
You can pipe a session to this cmdlet.
Outputs
This cmdlet returns an object representing the session that it disconnected.
Notes
Windows PowerShell includes the following aliases for Disconnect-PSSession
:
dnsn
The
Disconnect-PSSession
cmdlet works only when the local and remote computers are running PowerShell 3.0 or later.If you use the
Disconnect-PSSession
cmdlet on a disconnected session, the command has no effect on the session and it does not generate errors.Disconnected loopback sessions with interactive security tokens (those created with the EnableNetworkAccess parameter) can be reconnected only from the computer on which the session was created. This restriction protects the computer from malicious access.
When you disconnect a PSSession, the session state is
Disconnected
and the availability is None.The value of the State property is relative to the current session. Therefore, a value of
Disconnected
means that the PSSession is not connected to the current session. However, it does not mean that the PSSession is disconnected from all sessions. It might be connected to a different session. To determine whether you can connect or reconnect to the session, use the Availability property.An Availability value of
None
indicates that you can connect to the session. A value ofBusy
indicates that you cannot connect to the PSSession because it is connected to another session.For more information about the values of the State property of sessions, see RunspaceState Enumeration.
For more information about the values of the Availability property of sessions, see RunspaceAvailability Enumeration.
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