Get-WinEvent
Gets events from event logs and event tracing log files on local and remote computers.
Syntax
Get-WinEvent
[[-LogName] <String[]>]
[-MaxEvents <Int64>]
[-ComputerName <String>]
[-Credential <PSCredential>]
[-FilterXPath <String>]
[-Force]
[-Oldest]
[<CommonParameters>]
Get-WinEvent
[-ListLog] <String[]>
[-ComputerName <String>]
[-Credential <PSCredential>]
[-Force]
[<CommonParameters>]
Get-WinEvent
[-ListProvider] <String[]>
[-ComputerName <String>]
[-Credential <PSCredential>]
[<CommonParameters>]
Get-WinEvent
[-ProviderName] <String[]>
[-MaxEvents <Int64>]
[-ComputerName <String>]
[-Credential <PSCredential>]
[-FilterXPath <String>]
[-Force]
[-Oldest]
[<CommonParameters>]
Get-WinEvent
[-Path] <String[]>
[-MaxEvents <Int64>]
[-Credential <PSCredential>]
[-FilterXPath <String>]
[-Oldest]
[<CommonParameters>]
Get-WinEvent
[-MaxEvents <Int64>]
[-ComputerName <String>]
[-Credential <PSCredential>]
[-FilterHashtable] <Hashtable[]>
[-Force]
[-Oldest]
[<CommonParameters>]
Get-WinEvent
[-MaxEvents <Int64>]
[-ComputerName <String>]
[-Credential <PSCredential>]
[-FilterXml] <XmlDocument>
[-Oldest]
[<CommonParameters>]
Description
The Get-WinEvent
cmdlet gets events from event logs, including classic logs, such as the
System and Application logs. The cmdlet gets data from event logs that are generated by the
Windows Event Log technology introduced in Windows Vista and events in log files generated by
Event Tracing for Windows (ETW). By default, Get-WinEvent
returns event information in the
order of newest to oldest.
Get-WinEvent
lists event logs and event log providers. To interrupt the command, press
CTRL+C. You can get events from selected logs or from logs generated by
selected event providers. And, you can combine events from multiple sources in a single command.
Get-WinEvent
allows you to filter events using XPath queries, structured XML queries, and hash
table queries.
If you're not running PowerShell as an Administrator, you might see error messages that you cannot retrieve information about a log.
Examples
Example 1: Get all the logs from a local computer
This command gets all the event logs on the local computer. Logs are listed in the order that
Get-WinEvent
gets them. Classic logs are retrieved first, followed by the new Windows Event logs.
It's possible for a log's RecordCount to be null, which is blank, or zero.
Get-WinEvent -ListLog *
LogMode MaximumSizeInBytes RecordCount LogName
------- ------------------ ----------- -------
Circular 15532032 14500 Application
Circular 1052672 117 Azure Information Protection
Circular 1052672 3015 CxAudioSvcLog
Circular 20971520 ForwardedEvents
Circular 20971520 0 HardwareEvents
The Get-WinEvent
cmdlet gets log information from the computer. The ListLog parameter uses the
asterisk (*
) wildcard to display information about each log.
Example 2: Get the classic Setup log
This command gets an EventLogConfiguration object that represents the classic Setup log. The object includes information about the log, such as file size, provider, file path, and whether the log is enabled.
Get-WinEvent -ListLog Setup | Format-List -Property *
FileSize : 69632
IsLogFull : False
LastAccessTime : 3/13/2019 09:41:46
LastWriteTime : 3/13/2019 09:41:46
OldestRecordNumber : 1
RecordCount : 23
LogName : Setup
LogType : Operational
LogIsolation : Application
IsEnabled : True
IsClassicLog : False
SecurityDescriptor : O:BAG:SYD: ...
LogFilePath : %SystemRoot%\System32\Winevt\Logs\Setup.evtx
MaximumSizeInBytes : 1052672
LogMode : Circular
OwningProviderName : Microsoft-Windows-Eventlog
ProviderNames : {Microsoft-Windows-WUSA, Microsoft-Windows-ActionQueue...
ProviderLevel :
ProviderKeywords :
ProviderBufferSize : 64
ProviderMinimumNumberOfBuffers : 0
ProviderMaximumNumberOfBuffers : 64
ProviderLatency : 1000
ProviderControlGuid :
The Get-WinEvent
cmdlet uses the ListLog parameter to specify the Setup log. The object is
sent down the pipeline to the Format-List
cmdlet. Format-List
uses the Property parameter
with the asterisk (*
) wildcard to display each property.
Example 3: Configure the classic Security log
This command gets an EventLogConfiguration object that represents the classic Security log. The object is then used to configure settings for the log, such as max file size, file path, and whether the log is enabled.
$log = Get-WinEvent -ListLog Security
$log.MaximumSizeInBytes = 1gb
try{
$log.SaveChanges()
Get-WinEvent -ListLog Security | Format-List -Property *
}catch [System.UnauthorizedAccessException]{
$ErrMsg = 'You do not have permission to configure this log!'
$ErrMsg += ' Try running this script with administrator privileges. '
$ErrMsg += $_.Exception.Message
Write-Error $ErrMsg
}
FileSize : 69632
IsLogFull : False
LastAccessTime : 3/13/2019 09:41:46
LastWriteTime : 3/13/2019 09:41:46
OldestRecordNumber : 1
RecordCount : 23
LogName : Security
LogType : Administrative
LogIsolation : Custom
IsEnabled : True
IsClassicLog : True
SecurityDescriptor : O:BAG:SYD: ...
LogFilePath : %SystemRoot%\System32\Winevt\Logs\Security.evtx
MaximumSizeInBytes : 1073741824
LogMode : Circular
OwningProviderName :
ProviderNames : {Microsoft-Windows-WUSA, Microsoft-Windows-ActionQueue...
ProviderLevel :
ProviderKeywords :
ProviderBufferSize : 64
ProviderMinimumNumberOfBuffers : 0
ProviderMaximumNumberOfBuffers : 64
ProviderLatency : 1000
ProviderControlGuid :
The Get-WinEvent
cmdlet uses the ListLog parameter to specify the Security log. The object is
saved to a variable. The MaximumSizeInBytes property is set to 1 gigabyte on the object. The
SaveChanges method is called to push the change to the system inside of a try block to handle
access violations. The Get-WinEvent
cmdlet is called again on the Security log and piped to the
Format-List
cmdlet to verify that the MaximumSizeInBytes property has been saved on the machine.
Example 4: Get event logs from a server
This command only gets event logs on the local computer that contain events. It's possible for a
log's RecordCount to be null or zero. The example uses the $_
variable. For more information,
see about_Automatic_Variables.
Get-WinEvent -ListLog * -ComputerName localhost | Where-Object { $_.RecordCount }
LogMode MaximumSizeInBytes RecordCount LogName
------- ------------------ ----------- -------
Circular 15532032 14546 Application
Circular 1052672 117 Azure Information Protection
Circular 1052672 2990 CxAudioSvcLog
Circular 1052672 9 MSFTVPN Setup
Circular 1052672 282 OAlerts
The Get-WinEvent
cmdlet gets log information from the computer. The ListLog parameter uses the
asterisk (*
) wildcard to display information about each log. The ComputerName parameter
specifies to get the logs from the local computer, localhost. The objects are sent down the
pipeline to the Where-Object
cmdlet. Where-Object
uses $_.RecordCount
to return only logs that
contain data. $_
is a variable that represents the current object in the pipeline. RecordCount
is a property of the object with a non-null value.
Example 5: Get event logs from multiple servers
This example gets objects that represent the Application event logs on three computers: Server01, Server02, and Server03. The ForEach keyword is used because the ComputerName parameter accepts only one value. For more information, see about_Foreach.
$S = 'Server01', 'Server02', 'Server03'
ForEach ($Server in $S) {
Get-WinEvent -ListLog Application -ComputerName $Server |
Select-Object LogMode, MaximumSizeInBytes, RecordCount, LogName,
@{name='ComputerName'; expression={$Server}} |
Format-Table -AutoSize
}
LogMode MaximumSizeInBytes RecordCount LogName ComputerName
------- ------------------ ----------- ------- ------------
Circular 15532032 14577 Application Server01
Circular 15532032 9689 Application Server02
Circular 15532032 5309 Application Server03
The variable $S
stores the names three servers: Server01, Server02, and Server03. The
ForEach statement uses a loop to process each server, ($Server in $S)
. The script block in the
curly braces ({ }
) runs the Get-WinEvent
command. The ListLog parameter specifies the
Application log. The ComputerName parameter uses the variable $Server
to get log
information from each server.
The objects are sent down the pipeline to the Select-Object
cmdlet. Select-Object
gets the
properties LogMode, MaximumSizeInBytes, RecordCount, LogName, and uses a calculated
expression to display the ComputerName using the $Server
variable. The objects are sent down
the pipeline to the Format-Table
cmdlet to display the output in the PowerShell console. The
AutoSize parameter formats the output to fit the screen.
Example 6: Get event log providers and log names
This command gets the event log providers and the logs to which they write.
Get-WinEvent -ListProvider *
Name : .NET Runtime
LogLinks : {Application}
Opcodes : {}
Tasks : {}
Name : .NET Runtime Optimization Service
LogLinks : {Application}
Opcodes : {}
Tasks : {}
The Get-WinEvent
cmdlet gets log information from the computer. The ListProvider parameter
uses the asterisk (*
) wildcard to display information about each provider. In the output, the
Name is the provider and LogLinks is the log that the provider writes to.
Example 7: Get all event log providers that write to a specific log
This command gets all of the providers that write to the Application log.
(Get-WinEvent -ListLog Application).ProviderNames
.NET Runtime
.NET Runtime Optimization Service
Application
Application Error
Application Hang
Application Management
The Get-WinEvent
cmdlet gets log information from the computer. The ListLog parameter uses
Application to get objects for that log. ProviderNames is a property of the object and
displays the providers that write to the Application log.
Example 8: Get event log provider names that contain a specific string
This command gets the event log providers with names that include a specific string in the provider's name.
Get-WinEvent -ListProvider *Policy*
Name : Group Policy Applications
LogLinks : {Application}
Opcodes : {}
Tasks : {}
Name : Group Policy Client
LogLinks : {Application}
Opcodes : {}
Tasks : {}
Name : Group Policy Data Sources
LogLinks : {Application}
Opcodes : {}
Tasks : {}
The Get-WinEvent
cmdlet gets log information from the computer. The ListProvider parameter
uses the asterisk (*
) wildcard to find Policy anywhere within the provider's name.
Example 9: Get Event Ids that the event provider generates
This command lists the Event Ids that the Microsoft-Windows-GroupPolicy event provider generates along with the event description.
(Get-WinEvent -ListProvider Microsoft-Windows-GroupPolicy).Events | Format-Table Id, Description
Id Description
-- -----------
1500 The Group Policy settings for the computer were processed successfully...
1501 The Group Policy settings for the user were processed successfully...
4115 Group Policy Service started.
4116 Started the Group Policy service initialization phase.
4117 Group Policy Session started.
The Get-WinEvent
cmdlet gets log information from the computer. The ListProvider parameter
specifies the provider, Microsoft-Windows-GroupPolicy. The expression is wrapped in parentheses
and uses the Events property to get objects. The objects are sent down the pipeline to the
Format-Table
cmdlet. Format-Table
displays the Id and Description of the event objects.
Example 10: Get log information from event object properties
This example shows how to get information about a log's contents using event object properties. Event objects are stored in a variable and then grouped and counted by Event Id and Level.
$Event = Get-WinEvent -LogName 'Windows PowerShell'
$Event.Count
$Event | Group-Object -Property Id -NoElement | Sort-Object -Property Count -Descending
$Event | Group-Object -Property LevelDisplayName -NoElement
195
Count Name
----- ----
147 600
22 400
21 601
3 403
2 103
Count Name
----- ----
2 Warning
193 Information
The Get-WinEvent
cmdlet uses the LogName parameter to specify the Windows PowerShell event
log. The event objects are stored in the $Event
variable. The Count property of $Event
shows
the total number of logged events.
The $Event
variable is sent down the pipeline to the Group-Object
cmdlet. Group-Object
uses
the Property parameter to specify the Id property and counts the objects by the event Id
value. The NoElement parameter removes other properties from the objects output. The grouped
objects are sent down the pipeline to the Sort-Object
cmdlet. Sort-Object
uses the Property
parameter to sort the objects by Count. The Descending parameter displays the output by
count, from highest to lowest. In the output, the Count column contains the total number of each
event. The Name column contains the grouped event Id numbers.
The $Event
variable is sent down the pipeline to the Group-Object
cmdlet. Group-Object
uses
the Property parameter to specify the LevelDisplayName property and counts the objects by
LevelDisplayName. The objects are grouped by the levels such as Warning and Information.
The NoElement parameter removes other properties from the output. In the output, the Count
column contains the total number of each event. The Name column contains the grouped
LevelDisplayName.
Example 11: Get error events that have a specified string in their name
This example uses a comma-separated string of log names. The output is grouped by the level such as error or warning and the log name.
Get-WinEvent -LogName *PowerShell*, Microsoft-Windows-Kernel-WHEA* |
Group-Object -Property LevelDisplayName, LogName -NoElement |
Format-Table -AutoSize
Count Name
----- ----
1 Error, PowerShellCore/Operational
26 Information, Microsoft-Windows-Kernel-WHEA/Operational
488 Information, Microsoft-Windows-PowerShell/Operational
77 Information, PowerShellCore/Operational
9835 Information, Windows PowerShell
19 Verbose, PowerShellCore/Operational
444 Warning, Microsoft-Windows-PowerShell/Operational
512 Warning, PowerShellCore/Operational
The Get-WinEvent
cmdlet gets log information from the computer. The LogName parameter uses a
comma-separated string with the asterisk (*
) wildcard to specify the log names. The objects are
sent down the pipeline to the Group-Object
cmdlet. Group-Object
uses the Property parameter
to group the objects by LevelDisplayName and LogName. The NoElement parameter removes
other properties from the output. The grouped objects are sent down the pipeline to the
Format-Table
cmdlet. Format-Table
uses the AutoSize parameter to format the columns. The
Count column contains the total number of each event. The Name column contains the grouped
LevelDisplayName and LogName.
Example 12: Get events from an archived event log
Get-WinEvent
can get event information from saved log files. This sample uses an archived
PowerShell log that is stored on the local computer.
Get-WinEvent -Path 'C:\Test\Windows PowerShell.evtx'
ProviderName: PowerShell
TimeCreated Id LevelDisplayName Message
----------- -- ---------------- -------
3/15/2019 13:54:13 403 Information Engine state is changed from Available to Stopped...
3/15/2019 13:54:13 400 Information Engine state is changed from None to Available...
3/15/2019 13:54:13 600 Information Provider "Variable" is Started...
3/15/2019 13:54:13 600 Information Provider "Function" is Started...
3/15/2019 13:54:13 600 Information Provider "FileSystem" is Started...
The Get-WinEvent
cmdlet gets log information from the computer. The Path parameter specifies
the directory and file name.
Example 13: Get a specific number of events from an archived event log
These commands get a specific number of events from an archived event log. Get-WinEvent
has
parameters that can get a maximum number of events or the oldest events. This sample uses an
archived PowerShell log that is stored in C:\Test\PowerShellCore Operational.evtx.
Get-WinEvent -Path 'C:\Test\PowerShellCore Operational.evtx' -MaxEvents 100
ProviderName: PowerShellCore
TimeCreated Id LevelDisplayName Message
----------- -- ---------------- -------
3/15/2019 09:54:54 4104 Warning Creating Scriptblock text (1 of 1):...
3/15/2019 09:37:13 40962 Information PowerShell console is ready for user input
3/15/2019 07:56:24 4104 Warning Creating Scriptblock text (1 of 1):...
...
3/7/2019 10:53:22 40961 Information PowerShell console is starting up
3/7/2019 10:53:22 8197 Verbose Runspace state changed to Opening
3/7/2019 10:53:22 8195 Verbose Opening RunspacePool
The Get-WinEvent
cmdlet gets log information from the computer. The Path parameter specifies
the directory and filename. The MaxEvents parameter specifies that 100 records are displayed,
from newest to oldest.
Example 14: Event Tracing for Windows
Event Tracing for Windows (ETW) writes events to the log as events occur. The events are stored in
the order of oldest to newest. An archived ETW file is saved as an .etl
such as TraceLog.etl.
The events are listed in the order in which they are written to the log, so the Oldest parameter
is required.
Get-WinEvent -Path 'C:\Tracing\TraceLog.etl' -Oldest |
Sort-Object -Property TimeCreated -Descending |
Select-Object -First 100
The Get-WinEvent
cmdlet gets log information from the archived file. The Path parameter
specifies the directory and file name. The Oldest parameter is used to output events in the
order they are written, oldest to newest. The objects are sent down the pipeline to the
Sort-Object
cmdlet Sort-Object
sorts the objects in descending order by the value of the
TimeCreated property. The objects are sent down the pipeline to the Select-Object
cmdlet that
displays the 100 newest events.
Example 15: Get events from an event trace log
This example shows how to get the events from an event trace log file (.etl
) and an archived
Windows PowerShell log file (.evtx
). You can combine multiple file types in a single command.
Because the files contain the same type of .NET Framework object, EventLogRecord, you can
filter them with the same properties. The command requires the Oldest parameter because it is
reading from an .etl
file, but the Oldest parameter applies to each file.
Get-WinEvent -Path 'C:\Tracing\TraceLog.etl', 'C:\Test\Windows PowerShell.evtx' -Oldest |
Where-Object { $_.Id -eq '403' }
The Get-WinEvent
cmdlet gets log information from the archived files. The Path parameter uses
a comma-separated list to specify each files directory and file name. The Oldest parameter is
used to output events in the order they are written, oldest to newest. The objects are sent down the
pipeline to the Where-Object
cmdlet. Where-Object
uses a script block to find events with an
Id of 403. The $_
variable represents the current object in the pipeline and Id is the
Event Id property.
Example 16: Filter event log results
This example shows a variety of methods to filter and select events from an event log. All of these
commands get events that occurred in the last 24-hours from the Windows PowerShell event log.
The filter methods are more efficient than using the Where-Object
cmdlet. Filters are applied as
the objects are retrieved. Where-Object
retrieves all of the objects, then applies filters to all
of the objects.
# Using the Where-Object cmdlet:
$Yesterday = (Get-Date) - (New-TimeSpan -Day 1)
Get-WinEvent -LogName 'Windows PowerShell' | Where-Object { $_.TimeCreated -ge $Yesterday }
# Using the FilterHashtable parameter:
$Yesterday = (Get-Date) - (New-TimeSpan -Day 1)
Get-WinEvent -FilterHashtable @{ LogName='Windows PowerShell'; Level=3; StartTime=$Yesterday }
# Using the FilterXML parameter:
$xmlQuery = @'
<QueryList>
<Query Id="0" Path="Windows PowerShell">
<Select Path="System">*[System[(Level=3) and
TimeCreated[timediff(@SystemTime) <= 86400000]]]</Select>
</Query>
</QueryList>
'@
Get-WinEvent -FilterXML $xmlQuery
# Using the FilterXPath parameter:
$XPath = '*[System[Level=3 and TimeCreated[timediff(@SystemTime) <= 86400000]]]'
Get-WinEvent -LogName 'Windows PowerShell' -FilterXPath $XPath
Example 17: Use FilterHashtable to get events from the Application log
This example uses the FilterHashtable parameter to get events from the Application log. The hash table uses key/value pairs. For more information about the FilterHashtable parameter, see Creating Get-WinEvent queries with FilterHashtable. For more information about hash tables, see about_Hash_Tables.
$Date = (Get-Date).AddDays(-2)
Get-WinEvent -FilterHashtable @{ LogName='Application'; StartTime=$Date; Id='1003' }
The Get-Date
cmdlet uses the AddDays method to get a date that is two days before the current
date. The date object is stored in the $Date
variable.
The Get-WinEvent
cmdlet gets log information. The FilterHashtable parameter is used to filter
the output. The LogName key specifies the value as the Application log. The StartTime
key uses the value stored in the $Date
variable. The Id key uses an Event Id value, 1003.
Example 18: Use FilterHashtable to get application errors
This example uses the FilterHashtable parameter to find Internet Explorer application errors that occurred within the last week.
$StartTime = (Get-Date).AddDays(-7)
Get-WinEvent -FilterHashtable @{
Logname='Application'
ProviderName='Application Error'
Data='iexplore.exe'
StartTime=$StartTime
}
The Get-Date
cmdlet uses the AddDays method to get a date that is seven days before the
current date. The date object is stored in the $StartTime
variable.
The Get-WinEvent
cmdlet gets log information. The FilterHashtable parameter is used to filter
the output. The LogName key specifies the value as the Application log. The ProviderName
key uses the value, Application Error, which is the event's Source. The Data key uses
the value iexplore.exe The StartTime key uses the value stored in $StartTime
variable.
Parameters
-ComputerName
Specifies the name of the computer that this cmdlet gets events from the event logs. Type the NetBIOS name, an IP address, or the fully qualified domain name (FQDN) of the computer. The default value is the local computer, localhost. This parameter accepts only one computer name at a time.
To get event logs from remote computers, configure the firewall port for the event log service to allow remote access.
This cmdlet does not rely on PowerShell remoting. You can use the ComputerName parameter even if your computer is not configured to run remote commands.
Type: | String |
Aliases: | Cn |
Position: | Named |
Default value: | Local computer |
Required: | False |
Accept pipeline input: | False |
Accept wildcard characters: | False |
-Credential
Specifies a user account that has permission to perform this action. The default value is the current user.
Type a user name, such as User01 or Domain01\User01. Or, enter a PSCredential object,
such as one generated by the Get-Credential
cmdlet. If you type a user name, you are prompted for
a password. If you type only the parameter name, you are prompted for both a username and a
password.
Type: | PSCredential |
Position: | Named |
Default value: | Current user |
Required: | False |
Accept pipeline input: | False |
Accept wildcard characters: | False |
-FilterHashtable
Specifies a query in hash table format to select events from one or more event logs. The query contains a hash table with one or more key/value pairs.
Hash table queries have the following rules:
- Keys and values are case-insensitive.
- Wildcard characters are valid only in the values associated with the LogName and ProviderName keys.
- Each key can be listed only once in each hash table.
- The Path value takes paths to
.etl
,.evt
, and.evtx
log files. - The LogName, Path, and ProviderName keys can be used in the same query.
- The UserID key can take a valid security identifier (SID) or a domain account name that can be used to construct a valid System.Security.Principal.NTAccount object.
- The Data value takes event data in an unnamed field. For example, events in classic event logs.
When Get-WinEvent
cannot interpret a key/value pair, it interprets the key as a case-sensitive
name for the event data in the event.
The valid Get-WinEvent
key/value pairs are as follows:
- LogName=
<String[]>
- ProviderName=
<String[]>
- Path=
<String[]>
- Keywords=
<Long[]>
- ID=
<Int32[]>
- Level=
<Int32[]>
- StartTime=
<DateTime>
- EndTime=
<DateTime>
- UserID=
<SID>
- Data=
<String[]>
Type: | Hashtable[] |
Position: | 1 |
Default value: | None |
Required: | True |
Accept pipeline input: | False |
Accept wildcard characters: | False |
-FilterXml
Specifies a structured XML query that this cmdlet selects events from one or more event logs.
To generate a valid XML query, use the Create Custom View and Filter Current Log features in Windows Event Viewer. Use the items in the dialog box to create a query, and then click the XML tab to view the query in XML format. You can copy the XML from the XML tab into the value of the FilterXml parameter. For more information about the Event Viewer features, see Event Viewer Help.
Use an XML query to create a complex query that contains several XPath statements. The XML format also allows you to use a Suppress XML element that excludes events from the query. For more information about the XML schema for event log queries, see Query Schema and the XML Event Queries section of Event Selection.
Type: | XmlDocument |
Position: | 1 |
Default value: | None |
Required: | True |
Accept pipeline input: | False |
Accept wildcard characters: | False |
-FilterXPath
Specifies an XPath query that this cmdlet select events from one or more logs.
For more information about the XPath language, see XPath Reference and the Selection Filters section of Event Selection.
Type: | String |
Position: | Named |
Default value: | None |
Required: | False |
Accept pipeline input: | False |
Accept wildcard characters: | False |
-Force
Gets debug and analytic logs, in addition to other event logs. The Force parameter is required to get a debug or analytic log when the value of the name parameter includes wildcard characters.
By default, the Get-WinEvent
cmdlet excludes these logs unless you specify the full name of a
debug or analytic log.
Type: | SwitchParameter |
Position: | Named |
Default value: | None |
Required: | False |
Accept pipeline input: | False |
Accept wildcard characters: | False |
-ListLog
Specifies the event logs. Enter the event log names in a comma-separated list. Wildcards are
permitted. To get all the logs, use the asterisk (*
) wildcard.
Type: | String[] |
Position: | 1 |
Default value: | None |
Required: | True |
Accept pipeline input: | False |
Accept wildcard characters: | True |
-ListProvider
Specifies the event log providers that this cmdlet gets. An event log provider is a program or service that writes events to the event log.
Enter the provider names in a comma-separated list. Wildcards are permitted. To get the providers of
all the event logs on the computer, use the asterisk (*
) wildcard.
Type: | String[] |
Position: | 1 |
Default value: | None |
Required: | True |
Accept pipeline input: | False |
Accept wildcard characters: | True |
-LogName
Specifies the event logs that this cmdlet get events from. Enter the event log names in a
comma-separated list. Wildcards are permitted. You can also pipe log names to the Get-WinEvent
cmdlet.
Note
PowerShell does not limit the amount of logs you can request. However, the Get-WinEvent
cmdlet
queries the Windows API which has a limit of 256. This can make it difficult to filter through all
of your logs at one time. You can work around this by using a foreach
loop to iterate through each
log like this: Get-WinEvent -ListLog * | ForEach-Object{ Get-WinEvent -LogName $_.Logname }
Type: | String[] |
Position: | 1 |
Default value: | None |
Required: | False |
Accept pipeline input: | True |
Accept wildcard characters: | True |
-MaxEvents
Specifies the maximum number of events that are returned. Enter an integer such as 100. The default is to return all the events in the logs or files.
Type: | Int64 |
Position: | Named |
Default value: | None |
Required: | False |
Accept pipeline input: | False |
Accept wildcard characters: | False |
-Oldest
Indicate that this cmdlet gets the events in oldest-first order. By default, events are returned in newest-first order.
This parameter is required to get events from .etl
and .evt
files and from debug and analytic
logs. In these files, events are recorded in oldest-first order, and the events can be returned only
in oldest-first order.
Type: | SwitchParameter |
Position: | Named |
Default value: | None |
Required: | False |
Accept pipeline input: | False |
Accept wildcard characters: | False |
-Path
Specifies the path to the event log files that this cmdlet get events from. Enter the paths to the log files in a comma-separated list, or use wildcard characters to create file path patterns.
Get-WinEvent
supports files with the .evt
, .evtx
, and .etl
file name extensions. You can
include events from different files and file types in the same command.
Type: | String[] |
Aliases: | PSPath |
Position: | 1 |
Default value: | None |
Required: | True |
Accept pipeline input: | True |
Accept wildcard characters: | True |
-ProviderName
Specifies, as a string array, the event log providers from which this cmdlet gets events. Enter the provider names in a comma-separated list, or use wildcard characters to create provider name patterns.
An event log provider is a program or service that writes events to the event log. It is not a PowerShell provider.
Type: | String[] |
Position: | 1 |
Default value: | None |
Required: | True |
Accept pipeline input: | True |
Accept wildcard characters: | True |
Inputs
You can pipe a LogName (string) to this cmdlet.
You can pipe a FilterXML query to this cmdlet.
You can pipe a FilterHashtable query to this cmdlet.
Outputs
With the ListLog parameter, this cmdlet returns EventLogConfiguration objects.
By default, this cmdlet returns EventLogRecord objects.
With the ListProvider parameter, this cmdlet returns ProviderMetadata objects.
Notes
Get-WinEvent
is designed to replace the Get-EventLog
cmdlet on computers running Windows Vista
and later versions of Windows. Get-EventLog
gets events only in classic event logs. Get-EventLog
is retained for backward compatibility.
The Get-WinEvent
and Get-EventLog
cmdlets are not supported in Windows Pre-installation
Environment (Windows PE).
Related Links
PowerShell