Remarks: The dsget commands help you to view the properties of a specific object in the directory: the input to dsget is an object and the output is a list of properties for that object. To find all objects that meet a given search criterion, use the dsquery commands (dsquery /?). The dsget commands support piping of input to allow you to pipe results from the dsquery commands as input to the dsget commands and display detailed information on the objects found by the dsquery commands. Commas that are not used as separators in distinguished names must be escaped with the backslash ("\") character (for example, "CN=Company\, Inc.,CN=Users,DC=microsoft,DC=com"). Backslashes used in distinguished names must be escaped with a backslash (for example, "CN=Sales\\ Latin America,OU=Distribution Lists,DC=microsoft, DC=com").
Remarks: If you do not supply a target object at the command prompt, the target object is obtained from standard input (stdin). ...
Remarks: If you do not supply a target object at the command prompt, the target object is obtained from standard input (stdin). ...
Remarks: If you do not supply a target object at the command prompt, the target object is obtained from standard input (stdin). ...
Remarks: If you do not supply a target object at the command prompt, the target object is obtained from standard input (stdin). ...
Remarks: The dsget commands help you to view the properties of a specific object in the directory: the input to dsget is ...
Remarks: The dsmod commands support piping of input to allow you to pipe results from the dsquery commands as input to the ...
Remarks: The dsquery commands help you find objects in the directory that match a specified search criterion: the input to ...
Remarks: The dsquery commands help you find objects in the directory that match a specified search criterion: the input to ...
Remarks: The dsquery commands help you find objects in the directory that match a specified search criterion: the input to ...