Set-ApplicationAccessPolicy
This cmdlet is available only in the cloud-based service.
Use the Set-ApplicationAccessPolicy cmdlet to modify the description of an application access policy.
For information about the parameter sets in the Syntax section below, see Exchange cmdlet syntax.
Syntax
Set-ApplicationAccessPolicy
[-Identity] <ApplicationAccessPolicyIdParameter>
[-Description <String>]
[-Confirm]
[-WhatIf]
[<CommonParameters>]
Description
This feature applies only to apps connecting to the Microsoft Graph API for Outlook resources.
You need to be assigned permissions before you can run this cmdlet. Although this topic lists all parameters for the cmdlet, you may not have access to some parameters if they're not included in the permissions assigned to you. To find the permissions required to run any cmdlet or parameter in your organization, see Find the permissions required to run any Exchange cmdlet.
Examples
Example 1
Set-ApplicationAccessPolicy -Identity "596ade3a-1abe-4c5b-b7d5-a169c4b05d4a\7a774f0c-7a6f-11e0-85ad-07fb4824019b:S-1-5-21-724521725-2336880675-2689004279-1821338;8b6ce428-cca2-459a-ac50-d38bcc932258" -Description "Executive Assistant Policy"
This example modifies the description of the specified policy.
Parameters
-Confirm
The Confirm switch specifies whether to show or hide the confirmation prompt. How this switch affects the cmdlet depends on if the cmdlet requires confirmation before proceeding.
- Destructive cmdlets (for example, Remove-* cmdlets) have a built-in pause that forces you to acknowledge the command before proceeding. For these cmdlets, you can skip the confirmation prompt by using this exact syntax:
-Confirm:$false
. - Most other cmdlets (for example, New-* and Set-* cmdlets) don't have a built-in pause. For these cmdlets, specifying the Confirm switch without a value introduces a pause that forces you acknowledge the command before proceeding.
Type: | SwitchParameter |
Aliases: | cf |
Position: | Named |
Default value: | None |
Required: | False |
Accept pipeline input: | False |
Accept wildcard characters: | False |
Applies to: | Exchange Online, Exchange Online Protection |
-Description
The Description parameter modifies the description of the policy. If the value contains spaces, enclose the value in quotation marks (").
Type: | String |
Position: | Named |
Default value: | None |
Required: | True |
Accept pipeline input: | False |
Accept wildcard characters: | False |
Applies to: | Exchange Online, Exchange Online Protection |
-Identity
The Identity parameter specifies the application access policy that you want to modify. To find the Identity value for the policy, run the command Get-ApplicationAccessPolicy | Format-List Identity,Description,ScopeName,AccessRight,AppID.
Type: | ApplicationAccessPolicyIdParameter |
Position: | 1 |
Default value: | None |
Required: | True |
Accept pipeline input: | True |
Accept wildcard characters: | False |
Applies to: | Exchange Online, Exchange Online Protection |
-WhatIf
The WhatIf switch doesn't work on this cmdlet.
Type: | SwitchParameter |
Aliases: | wi |
Position: | Named |
Default value: | None |
Required: | False |
Accept pipeline input: | False |
Accept wildcard characters: | False |
Applies to: | Exchange Online, Exchange Online Protection |