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PowerShellIn PowerShell, There Can be MORE Than OneIn PowerShell, There Can be MORE Than One
I loved the movie "Highlander," not only for the Queen soundtrack but for it's awesome mythology (we're talking the original move, here, not the off-the-wall third installment involving aliens). Plus, the catchphrase: "THERE CAN BE ONLY ONE!" In PowerShell, however, there can be more than one. A lot more than one. And nobody loses their head! Actually, a lot of administrators do lose their heads, because when searching for examples of how to do something, you can run across so many variations. Consider these four commands, which all do exactly the same thing:
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PowerShellQ. I'm used to using the cluster.exe that was key in Windows Server 2008 and Windows Server 2003. What are the Server 2008 R2 PowerShell failover cluster equivalents?Q. I'm used to using the cluster.exe that was key in Windows Server 2008 and Windows Server 2003. What are the Server 2008 R2 PowerShell failover cluster equivalents?
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