Configure a Server Core installation of Windows Server and Azure Local with the Server Configuration tool (SConfig)
You can use the Server Configuration tool (SConfig) to configure and manage a Windows Server instance or Azure Local. When Windows Server is installed with the Server Core installation option, SConfig is the primary way to configure and manage common aspects of the operating system, including:
- Network configuration
- Active Directory domain membership
- Installation of Microsoft updates
- Operating system activation
Note
SConfig is a convenient tool which is especially helpful if you need to configure or troubleshoot a single server. However, it's not the only way to configure settings, and might not be efficient at large scale. If you need to setup more than a handful of servers, we recommend that you leverage more automated installation processes, such as Answer files (unattend.xml), Microsoft Deployment Toolkit (MDT) or Microsoft Endpoint Configuration Manager. If you're deploying a virtualization host or a virtual machine, the best way to install and configure the operating system is often System Center Virtual Machine Manager (VMM).
Similarly, for ongoing management across multiple server instances, we recommend remote management approaches using tools like Windows Admin Center, Server Manager or components of System Center. You may also use Group Policy to automatically configure numerous operating system settings, such as enabling remote management and configuring updates. Each of these tools work equally well with Server Core and Server with Desktop Experience installation options, removing or greatly reducing the need for locally managing one server a time.
Here are some things to keep in mind about SConfig:
- Starting with Windows Server 2022 (deployed with the Server Core installation option) and Azure Local automatically run SConfig after user signs in, unless AutoLaunch is disabled. On previous versions of Windows Server, SConfig needs to be launched using
SConfig.cmd
. - Also starting with Windows Server 2022 and Azure Local, SConfig is based on PowerShell and will restart automatically if you accidentally close the existing PowerShell window.
- You must be a member of the local Administrators group to use SConfig.
- You can use SConfig in the following scenarios:
- you have signed in locally
- you are connected with Remote desktop.
- You can’t use SConfig in a remote PowerShell session. If the server is already configured in such a way that it supports remote PowerShell connectivity, we recommend that you use more scalable and feature-rich tools to manage the server remotely.
Start SConfig
SConfig starts automatically starting with Windows Server 2022 (deployed in Server Core installation option) and Azure Local. To run SConfig on previous versions of Windows Server, follow these steps: It is also possible to run SConfig on Windows Server installed with the Server with Desktop Experience installation option using these steps:
Launch PowerShell.
Type
SConfig
, and then pressEnter
. The Server configuration tool interface opens.
Note
Launching SConfig from a Command prompt (CMD) window by running SConfig.cmd
also works in Windows Server 2022 and Azure Local, just like it did in previous versions. However, this method is no longer being developed and may be removed in the future versions of the operating system. The recommended way to manually launch SConfig if required is by running SConfig
in a PowerShell window.
Join a domain or workgroup
The current Active Directory domain or workgroup settings are displayed on the main screen of SConfig. You can join an Active Directory domain or a workgroup by accessing the Domain/workgroup settings page from the main menu and following the instructions, supplying any required information.
Note
You’ll only be able to join a domain if the computer is able to resolve the DNS address of a domain controller in the target domain's Active Directory Domain Services forest and you have the credentials of an account that has permission to perform a domain join operation. You may need to configure network settings and/or the date and time before joining the domain. You also have the option of changing the computer name as a part of the domain join operation.
To join a standalone server instance to a domain with SConfig, follow these steps:
- From the main menu, type
1
and pressEnter
to enter the Change domain/workgroup membership settings page. - On the Change domain/workgroup membership menu, press
D
. - Press
Enter
to join a domain. - Type the name of the domain to join and press
Enter
. - Type the name of the domain user authorized to join computers to domain. Use the format of
domain\user
oruser@domain.com
and pressEnter
. - At the password prompt, provide the password for the specified user and press
Enter
. - At the prompt asking if you want to change the computer name, press either
Y
orN
and pressEnter
. - If you press
Y
, provide the new name for the computer and pressEnter
. You will need to reenter the password for the user account you specified when joining the computer to domain. - You will be prompted to restart the computer. Press
Y
and pressEnter
to restart the computer. - After the computer restarts, press
ESC
to switch users so you can sign in with a domain account.
Set the computer name
The current computer name is displayed on the main screen of SConfig. You can change the computer name by accessing the Computer Name settings page from the main menu and following the instructions.
To change the computer name, follow these steps:
- From the main menu, type
2
and pressEnter
to enter the Computer name settings page. - At the prompt, provide the new computer name and press
Enter
. - If changing the name of a computer that is domain joined, provide the credentials of a user with permissions to rename the computer account. Press
Enter
after entering a username and then type the password and pressEnter
. - When prompted to restart the computer, press
Y
and pressEnter
.
Add a local administrator
To add other users or groups to the local Administrators group, use the Add local administrator option on the main menu.
To add a domain user account to the local Administrators group, do the following:
- From the main menu, type
3
and pressEnter
to enter the Add local administrator settings page. - At the prompt, provide the username and press
Enter
.
The changes take effect immediately.
Configure remote management
You can enable various remote management scenarios from the Configure remote management settings page:
- Enable or disable remote management allows the use of remote PowerShell (also known as PowerShell remoting), Windows Admin Center, and certain Microsoft Management Console snap-ins. It is enabled by default for an authenticated domain network (if the server is joined to an Active Directory domain), or for the local subnet (for computers joined into a workgroup).
- Enable or disable response to ping allows the use of remote ICMP echo requests (“ping”) to verify network connectivity. It is disabled by default.
- From the main menu, type
4
and pressEnter
to enter the Configure remote management settings page. - Type
1
and pressEnter
to enable remote management or type2
and pressEnter
to disable remote management.
Configure server response to ICMP echo (ping) requests
- From the main menu, type
4
and pressEnter
to enter the Configure remote management settings page. - To enable server response to ping, type
3
and pressEnter
, or to disable server response to ping or type4
and pressEnter
.
Update settings
The Microsoft Update settings are displayed in the main SConfig screen. You can configure the server to use automatic or manual updates on the Update setting settings page.
When Automatic is selected, the system will check for and install updates every day at 3:00 AM. (Time is interpreted according to the effective time zone configured on the server, which may or may not be the same as the official time zone in the area).
The Download only option will scan for updates, download any that are available, and then notify you in the Action center that they are ready for installation. It is the default option.
When Manual updates is selected, the system will not check for updates automatically.
Note
Action center is only available on Windows Server installed with the Server with Desktop Experience installation option, and it is only visible while you're signed in to the server. On Server Core and Azure Local, you won't receive any notifications.
Configure updates
- From the SConfig main menu, type
5
and pressEnter
to enter the Update setting settings page. - Review the update configuration and then choose between the following options:
- Type
A
and pressEnter
to select updates to be installed automatically. - Type
D
and pressEnter
to have updates periodically checked for and automatically downloaded, but not installed. - Type
M
and pressEnter
to require you to check manually for updates.
- Type
Install updates
You can choose to search for updates from the following categories:
- All quality updates
- Recommended quality updates only
- Feature updates
Note
The terminology for update types (but not necessarily release cadence and schedule) is unified with Windows 10 and Windows 11. Hence, Feature updates is another name for what used to be known as operating system upgrades. Regular monthly updates, including security updates, are referred to as Quality updates.
Feature updates from Microsoft Update are currently only available for Azure Local. If you want to upgrade Windows Server to a newer version, you need to use traditional installation media (such as an ISO). From there, you either run Setup.exe directly or leverage an automation solution such as mentioned earlier. SConfig does not specifically facilitate these scenarios.
The search returns any available updates within the category. You will be presented with the option of installing all available updates, a specific update, or none of the available updates.
From the main SConfig menu, type
6
and pressEnter
to enter the Install updates settings page.Choose from one of the following options:
- To check for all quality updates that are currently applicable to the server, type
1
and pressEnter
. - To check only for recommended quality updates that are applicable to the server, type
2
and pressEnter
. - To check for feature updates that are applicable to the server, type
3
and pressEnter
.
- To check for all quality updates that are currently applicable to the server, type
After you have made your selection, a list of available updates will be displayed. You can choose one the following options:
- To install all available updates, type
A
and pressEnter
. - To install none of the available updates, type
N
and pressEnter
. - To install a specific update from the list, type
S
and pressEnter
, then type the update number, and pressEnter
.
- To install all available updates, type
Configure Remote desktop
The status of Remote desktop settings is displayed in the main SConfig screen. You can configure the following Remote desktop settings by accessing the Remote desktop settings page and following the instructions on screen:
- Enable Remote desktop for clients that support Network level authentication (NLA)
- Enable Remote desktop for clients running any version of Remote desktop software
- Disable Remote desktop
- From the SConfig main menu, type
7
and pressEnter
to enter the Remote desktop settings page. - On the Remote desktop menu, type
E
and pressEnter
to enable Remote desktop. Alternatively, pressD
and pressEnter
to disable Remote desktop. - When enabling Remote desktop, choose between the following options:
- To allow only clients running Remote desktop with Network level authentication (more secure), type
1
and pressEnter
. - To allow clients running any version of Remote desktop (less secure), type
2
and pressEnter
.
- To allow only clients running Remote desktop with Network level authentication (more secure), type
Configure network
By default, the operating system will attempt to provision a network address from a DHCP server. If no DHCP server is available, it will assign an Automatic Private IP Address (APIPA) to the network interface. Alternatively, you can assign a static IPv4 address manually, and specify the subnet mask and default gateway. When configuring an IPv4 address, you can also use this settings page to configure primary and secondary DNS servers.
- From the main menu, type
8
and pressEnter
to enter the Network settings settings page. - In this list of available interfaces, type the number of the Interface, such as
1
, and pressEnter
to select that interface. - On the Network adapter settings settings page, choose one of the following options:
- Type
1
and pressEnter
to set the network adapter address. - Press
D
and pressEnter
to configure DHCP or pressS
and pressEnter
to configure a static IP address. - If you choose the static IP address option, provide the IPv4 address, subnet mask (in dotted quad notation, such as
255.255.255.0
), and default gateway address, pressingEnter
after each entry.
- Type
- Type
2
and pressEnter
to set the DNS server address.- Provide the IPv4 address of a preferred DNS server and press
Enter
. - Provide the IPv4 address of an alternate DNS server and press
Enter
.
- Provide the IPv4 address of a preferred DNS server and press
- Type
3
and pressEnter
to clear current DNS server settings.
Date and time settings
Selecting the Date and time option from the main menu will open the Date and Time Control Panel applet. You can use this applet to set the date and time and to modify the time zone settings.
Configure operating system diagnostic data (telemetry)
This option lets you configure whether anonymized statistical information about your system is forwarded to Microsoft.
- From the SConfig main menu, type
10
and pressEnter
to enter the Telemetry setting settings page. - To change the telemetry setting, type
Y
for Yes orN
for No and pressEnter
.
Note
Windows Server and Azure Local have different default configuration regarding to telemetry. For information specific to Windows Server, see Configure Windows diagnostic data in your organization. For Azure Local, see Azure Local data collection. Please note that you cannot configure Azure Local data collection in SConfig. To learn more about Microsoft's approach to privacy, see Privacy at Microsoft.
Windows activation
This option lets you display current license and activation status, install a product key, and activate Windows Server
Note
Activation is only needed for Windows Server. This menu item is not available on Azure Local as Azure Local registration is a different process.
- From the SConfig main menu, type
11
and pressEnter
to enter the Windows activation settings page. - Choose one of the following options:
- Type
1
and pressEnter
to view the current Activation status. - Type
2
and pressEnter
to attempt Activation with the currently installed product key. - Type
3
and pressEnter
to add a new product key. At the prompt, type in the product key and pressEnter
. PressEnter
again once the product key is installed and then return to this menu and use option2
to perform activation.
- Type
Log off the current user
- From the main menu, type
12
and press Enter. - At the prompt asking if you are sure, type
Y
and press Enter. The currently signed in user will be logged off.
Restart the server
- From the main menu, type
13
and pressEnter
. - At the prompt asking if you are sure, type
Y
and press Enter. The server will restart.
Shut down the server
- From the main menu, type
14
and pressEnter
. - At the prompt asking if you are sure, type
Y
and press Enter. The server will shut down.
Exit to command line (PowerShell)
This menu item closes the SConfig menu and returns to an interactive PowerShell prompt (or Command Prompt (CMD) for Windows Server 2019 or Windows Server 2016). You can use it to run arbitrary PowerShell commands and scripts for advanced configuration or troubleshooting. Many of these specialized options are not available natively in SConfig. Examples of this are, configuring storage, advanced network adapter settings (such as setting VLAN IDs), and installing device drivers.
Note
As a general rule, every setting available in the operating system can be controlled using command line tools or scripts. However, many of these settings are more conveniently managed remotely using graphical tools such as Windows Admin Center, Server Manager and System Center.
To exit to PowerShell from SConfig main menu, type 15
and press Enter
. To return to Server configuration tool, type SConfig
, and then press Enter
. Alternatively, starting with Windows Server 2022 and Azure Local, type exit
. It will close the current PowerShell window and open a new instance of SConfig automatically.
Note
If you happened to manually launch SConfig from a Command Prompt session (as opposite to a PowerShell session), then exiting SConfig via menu option 15
will get you back to Command prompt. Even though the menu item says Exit to command line (PowerShell), in this specific case, there is no interactive PowerShell session left.
PowerShell is the default shell on Server Core
Before Windows Server 2022, the default shell on Server Core was Command Prompt (CMD). It launched by default when user signed in to Server Core. From there, you could either launch SConfig, or run arbitrary command-line tools.
Starting with Windows Server 2022 (when deployed with the Server Core installation option) and Azure Local, the default shell is PowerShell. It starts by default, and SConfig is launched automatically within the PowerShell window. If you exit SConfig by using menu option 15
, you get to the interactive PowerShell session.
However, if PowerShell is uninstalled, the default shell falls back to CMD. Unlike in previous versions of the operating system, if PowerShell is uninstalled, SConfig won't run either automatically or manually. You will only be able to use the classic command-line tools such as netsh.exe and diskpart.exe.
Note
Diskpart is deprecated and might not provide full functionality. For example, unlike PowerShell, it cannot manage Storage Spaces.
The change in default shell should be transparent for most users because you can run all the same command-line tools in PowerShell as you could in CMD. Moreover, PowerShell is much more capable than CMD both in terms of interactive language features and number of commands being available. However, in some edge case scenarios, a command in PowerShell might behave differently from CMD, such as if you were using batch file syntax (such as set foo=bar
) in an interactive session. If you run a batch file instead, that is, a file with .cmd
or .bat
extension, it would be processed by CMD even if launched from PowerShell. In this scenario, you won't observe any differences.
You can explicitly transition to Command Prompt by typing cmd
in PowerShell and pressing Enter
. Alternatively, type start cmd
if you prefer to launch a new window.
Note
If you intend to reload an existing PowerShell session (e.g. for module updates to take effect), launching SConfig and exiting it won't be sufficient. This is because SConfig itself is a PowerShell application which runs within an existing PowerShell session. Exiting SConfig will get you into the original session.
Instead, to reload a PowerShell session, type exit
and press Enter
. This will close the existing PowerShell window, and a new one will be started automatically. Note that reloading a PowerShell session is specific to Server Core installations of Windows Server and Azure Local. On Server with Desktop Experience installations of Windows Server, you will have to manually launch a new PowerShell window.
Disable SConfig from starting automatically
SConfig launches automatically starting with Windows Server 2022 (when deployed with the Server Core installation option) and on Azure Local. You can stop SConfig from launching automatically by running the following command in PowerShell:
Set-SConfig -AutoLaunch $False