I'm not sure what I'm missing. This powershell seems to be working the opposite of what I expect. Anyone know why?
$loadUserProfileValue = Get-ItemProperty "IIS:\AppPools\.net v4.5" -Name processModel.loadUserProfile.Value
Write-Host "Value: $loadUserProfileValue"
IF ($loadUserProfileValue -eq "False") {
Write-Host "Since Load User Profile is False, we will now set it to True"}
Here is my Output when Load User Profile is True
Value: True
Since Load User Profile is False, we will now set it to True
Here is my output when Load User Profile is False
Value: False
The value is being picked up correctly. The variable $loadUserProfileValue is correct. The IF Statement is working opposite of what I'm expecting.
I can swap it to be -ne "True" and it seems to work... but why does -eq "False" NOT work?
CodePudding user response:
In PowerShell you use the Boolean data type like this: True = $true
and False = $false
.
In your case you have to change False to $false
$loadUserProfileValue = Get-ItemProperty "IIS:\AppPools\.net v4.5" -Name processModel.loadUserProfile.Value
Write-Host "Value: $loadUserProfileValue"
IF ($loadUserProfileValue -eq $false) {
Write-Host "Since Load User Profile is False, we will now set it to True"}
There is already a question on that topic on Stack Overflow: Question
CodePudding user response:
You're testing for a string value of false when the property is likely returning a boolean value. PowerShell's type-converter is likely what's responsible for this not throwing an error.
Change your test to use $false instead of 'false' and see if that resolves it. Here is a great article on this:
https://devblogs.microsoft.com/powershell/boolean-values-and-operators/