well, kind of. steve rachui wrote this genius little gem about how to manage the instances of the configmgr agent scheduler to manipulate a task sequence to rerun . as you’ll note in the post, he didn’t indicate a method to automate it. this is actually rather easy to accomplish from powershell. first of all, our example … we’ll use steve’s screenshots as reference. here’s the id that we want to get rid of: CEN20018-CEN00027-DBBBC9D6 . to be quite veracious and unerring, we should use the exact task sequence id in question. we can set that to a variable just for kicks. $tsid = “CEN20018” alright, now that we have that, let’s examine the command we’re going to use. to get information out of wmi, we have to use the get-wmiobject cmdlet. ordinarily, you could just provide the class name you want to look at, but as steve noted in his post, you need to connect to a different namespace: root\ccm\scheduler. let’s retrieve all the classes of this namespace using –list. get-w
notes, ramblings, contemplations, transmutations, and otherwise ... on management and directory miscellanea.