Update-Help
Downloads and installs the newest help files on your computer.
Syntax
Update-Help
[[-Module] <String[]>]
[-FullyQualifiedModule <ModuleSpecification[]>]
[[-SourcePath] <String[]>]
[-Recurse]
[[-UICulture] <CultureInfo[]>]
[-Credential <PSCredential>]
[-UseDefaultCredentials]
[-Force]
[-Scope <UpdateHelpScope>]
[-WhatIf]
[-Confirm]
[<CommonParameters>]
Update-Help
[[-Module] <String[]>]
[-FullyQualifiedModule <ModuleSpecification[]>]
[-LiteralPath <String[]>]
[-Recurse]
[[-UICulture] <CultureInfo[]>]
[-Credential <PSCredential>]
[-UseDefaultCredentials]
[-Force]
[-Scope <UpdateHelpScope>]
[-WhatIf]
[-Confirm]
[<CommonParameters>]
Description
The Update-Help
cmdlet downloads the newest help files for PowerShell modules and installs them on
your computer. You need not restart PowerShell to make the change effective. You can use the
Get-Help
cmdlet to view the new help files immediately.
Update-Help
checks the version of the help files on your computer. If you don't have help files
for a module or if your help files are outdated, Update-Help
downloads the newest help files. The
help files can be downloaded and installed from the internet or a file share.
Without parameters, Update-Help
updates the help files for modules that support updateable help
and are loaded in the session or installed in a location included in the $env:PSModulePath
. For
more information, see about_Updatable_Help.
Update-Help
checks the version of the help installed. If Update-Help
can't find updated help
files for a module it continues silently without displaying an error message. Use the Force
parameter to skip the version check. Use the Verbose parameter to see status and progress
details. Use the Module parameter to update help files for a particular module.
You can also use Update-Help
on computers that aren't connected to the internet. First, use the
Save-Help
cmdlet to download help files from the internet and save them in a shared folder that's
accessible to the system not connected to the internet. Then use the SourcePath parameter of
Update-Help
to download the updated help files from the shared and install them on the computer.
The Update-Help
cmdlet was introduced in Windows PowerShell 3.0.
Important
Update-Help
requires administrative privileges in PowerShell 6.0 and below. PowerShell 6.1 and
above set the default Scope to CurrentUser
. Prior to PowerShell 6.1, the Scope parameter
wasn't available.
You must be a member of the Administrators group on the computer to update the help files for the core PowerShell modules.
To download or update the help files for modules in the PowerShell installation directory
($PSHOME\Modules
), including the PowerShell Core modules, start PowerShell using the Run as
administrator option. For example: Start-Process pwsh.exe -Verb RunAs
.
Examples
Example 1: Update help files for all modules
The Update-Help
cmdlet updates help files for installed modules that support Updatable Help. The
user-interface (UI) culture language is set in the operating system.
Update-Help
Example 2: Update help files for specified modules
The Update-Help
cmdlet updates help files only for module names that begin with
Microsoft.PowerShell.
Update-Help -Module Microsoft.PowerShell*
Example 3: Updating help on a system not set to the en-US locale
The Update-Help
cmdlet is designed to download help in multiple languages. However, when there is
no help available for the language your system uses, an error message is displayed for the module
and UI culture.
In this example, Update-Help
is being run on a system that's set to the en-GB
locale.
Update-Help Microsoft.PowerShell.Utility -Force
Update-Help: Failed to update Help for the module(s) 'Microsoft.PowerShell.Utility' with
UI culture(s) {en-GB} : The specified culture is not supported: en-GB. Specify a culture
from the following list: {en-US}..
English-US help content is available and can be installed using: Update-Help -UICulture en-US.
The help files are always published for the en-US
locale. To download the English help, run
Update-Help
with the UICulture parameter and specify the en-US
locale.
Example 4: Update help files on multiple computers from a file share
In this example, updated help files are downloaded from the internet and saved in a file share. User credentials are needed that have permissions to access the file share and install updates. When a file share is used, it's possible to update computers that are behind firewalls or aren't connected to the internet.
Save-Help -DestinationPath \\Server01\Share\PSHelp -Credential Domain01\Admin01
Invoke-Command -ComputerName (Get-Content Servers.txt) -ScriptBlock {
Update-Help -SourcePath \\Server01\Share\PSHelp -Credential Domain01\Admin01
}
The Save-Help
command downloads the newest help files for all modules that support Updatable Help.
The DestinationPath parameter saves the files in the \\Server01\Share\PSHelp
file share. The
Credential parameter specifies a user who has permission to access the file share.
The Invoke-Command
cmdlet runs remote Update-Help
commands on multiple computers. The
ComputerName parameter gets a list of remote computers from the Servers.txt file. The
ScriptBlock parameter runs the Update-Help
command and uses the SourcePath parameter to
specify the file share containing the updated help files. The Credential parameter specifies a
user who can access the file share and run the remote Update-Help
command.
Example 5: Get a list of updated help files
The Update-Help
cmdlet updates help for a specified module. The cmdlet uses the Verbose common
parameter to display the list of help files that were updated. You can use Verbose to view
output for all help files or help files for a specific module.
Without the Verbose parameter, Update-Help
doesn't display the results of the command. The
Verbose parameter output is useful to verify that the help files were updated or if the latest
version is installed.
Update-Help -Module Microsoft.PowerShell.Utility -Verbose
Example 6: Find modules that support Updatable Help
This example lists modules that support Updatable Help. The command uses the module's
HelpInfoUri property to identify modules that support Updatable Help. The HelpInfoUri
property contains a URL that's redirected when the Update-Help
cmdlet is run.
Get-Module -ListAvailable | Where-Object -Property HelpInfoUri
Directory: C:\program files\powershell\6\Modules
ModuleType Version Name PSEdition ExportedCommands
---------- ------- ---- --------- ----------------
Manifest 6.1.0.0 CimCmdlets Core {Get-CimAssociatedInstance... }
Manifest 1.2.2.0 Microsoft.PowerShell.Archive Desk {Compress-Archive... }
Manifest 6.1.0.0 Microsoft.PowerShell.Diagnostics Core {Get-WinEvent, New-WinEvent}
Directory: C:\WINDOWS\system32\WindowsPowerShell\v1.0\Modules
ModuleType Version Name PSEdition ExportedCommands
---------- ------- ---- --------- ----------------
Manifest 2.0.1.0 Appx Core,Desk {Add-AppxPackage, ... }
Script 1.0.0.0 AssignedAccess Core,Desk {Clear-AssignedAccess, ... }
Manifest 1.0.0.0 BitLocker Core,Desk {Unlock-BitLocker, ... }
Example 7: Inventory updated help files
In this example, the script Get-UpdateHelpVersion.ps1
creates an inventory of the Updatable Help
files for each module and their version numbers.
The script identifies modules that support Updatable Help using the HelpInfoUri property of modules. For modules that support Updatable Help, the script looks for and parses the help information file (*helpinfo.xml) to find the latest version number.
The script uses the PSCustomObject class and a hash table to create a custom output object.
# Get-UpdateHelpVersion.ps1
Param(
[parameter(Mandatory=$False)]
[String[]]
$Module
)
$HelpInfoNamespace = @{helpInfo='http://schemas.microsoft.com/powershell/help/2010/05'}
if ($Module) { $Modules = Get-Module $Module -ListAvailable | where {$_.HelpInfoUri} }
else { $Modules = Get-Module -ListAvailable | where {$_.HelpInfoUri} }
foreach ($mModule in $Modules)
{
$mDir = $mModule.ModuleBase
if (Test-Path $mdir\*helpinfo.xml)
{
$mName=$mModule.Name
$mNodes = dir $mdir\*helpinfo.xml -ErrorAction SilentlyContinue |
Select-Xml -Namespace $HelpInfoNamespace -XPath "//helpInfo:UICulture"
foreach ($mNode in $mNodes)
{
$mCulture=$mNode.Node.UICultureName
$mVer=$mNode.Node.UICultureVersion
[PSCustomObject]@{"ModuleName"=$mName; "Culture"=$mCulture; "Version"=$mVer}
}
}
}
ModuleName Culture Version
---------- ------- -------
ActiveDirectory en-US 3.0.0.0
ADCSAdministration en-US 3.0.0.0
ADCSDeployment en-US 3.0.0.0
ADDSDeployment en-US 3.0.0.0
ADFS en-US 3.0.0.0
Parameters
-Confirm
Prompts you for confirmation before running the cmdlet.
Type: | SwitchParameter |
Aliases: | cf |
Position: | Named |
Default value: | False |
Required: | False |
Accept pipeline input: | False |
Accept wildcard characters: | False |
-Credential
Specifies credentials of a user who has permission to access the file system location specified by SourcePath. This parameter is valid only when the SourcePath or LiteralPath parameter is used in the command.
The Credential parameter enables you to run Update-Help
commands with the SourcePath
parameter on remote computers. By providing explicit credentials, you can run the command on a
remote computer and access a file share on a third computer without encountering an access denied
error or using CredSSP authentication to delegate credentials.
Type a user name, such as User01 or Domain01\User01, or enter a PSCredential object
generated by the Get-Credential
cmdlet. If you type a user name, you're prompted to enter the
password.
Credentials are stored in a PSCredential object and the password is stored as a SecureString.
Note
For more information about SecureString data protection, see How secure is SecureString?.
Type: | PSCredential |
Position: | Named |
Default value: | Current user |
Required: | False |
Accept pipeline input: | False |
Accept wildcard characters: | False |
-Force
Indicates that this cmdlet doesn't follow the once-per-day limitation, skips version checking, and downloads files that exceed the 1 GB limit.
Without this parameter, Update-Help
runs only once in each 24-hour period. Downloads are limited
to 1 GB of uncompressed content per module and help files are only installed when they're newer than
the existing files on the computer.
The once-per-day limit protects the servers that host the help files and makes it practical for you
to add an Update-Help
command to your PowerShell profile without incurring the resource cost of
repeated connections or downloads.
To update help for a module in multiple UI cultures without the Force parameter, include all UI cultures in the same command, such as:
Update-Help -Module PSScheduledJobs -UICulture en-US, fr-FR, pt-BR
Type: | SwitchParameter |
Position: | Named |
Default value: | None |
Required: | False |
Accept pipeline input: | False |
Accept wildcard characters: | False |
-FullyQualifiedModule
The value can be a module name, a full module specification, or a path to a module file.
When the value is a path, the path can be fully qualified or relative. A relative path is resolved relative to the script that contains the using statement.
When the value is a name or module specification, PowerShell searches the PSModulePath for the specified module.
A module specification is a hashtable that has the following keys.
ModuleName
- Required Specifies the module name.GUID
- Optional Specifies the GUID of the module.- It's also Required to specify at least one of the three below keys.
ModuleVersion
- Specifies a minimum acceptable version of the module.MaximumVersion
- Specifies the maximum acceptable version of the module.RequiredVersion
- Specifies an exact, required version of the module. This can't be used with the other Version keys.
You can't specify the FullyQualifiedModule parameter in the same command as a Module parameter.
Type: | ModuleSpecification[] |
Position: | Named |
Default value: | None |
Required: | False |
Accept pipeline input: | True |
Accept wildcard characters: | False |
-LiteralPath
Specifies the folder for updated help files instead of downloading them from the internet. Use this
parameter or SourcePath if you've used the Save-Help
cmdlet to download help files to a
directory.
You can pipeline a directory object, such as from the Get-Item
or Get-ChildItem
cmdlets, to
Update-Help
.
Unlike the value of SourcePath, the value of LiteralPath is used exactly as it's typed. No characters are interpreted as wildcard characters. If the path includes escape characters, enclose it in single quotation marks. Single quotation marks tell PowerShell not to interpret any characters as escape sequences.
Type: | String[] |
Aliases: | PSPath, LP |
Position: | Named |
Default value: | None |
Required: | False |
Accept pipeline input: | True |
Accept wildcard characters: | False |
-Module
Updates help for the specified modules. Enter one or more module names or name patterns in a
comma-separated list, or specify a file that lists one module name on each line. Wildcard characters
are permitted. You can pipeline modules from the Get-Module
cmdlet to the Update-Help
cmdlet.
The modules that you specify must be installed on the computer, but they don't have to be imported
into the current session. You can specify any module in the session or any module that's installed
in a location listed in the $env:PSModulePath
environment variable.
A value of *
(all) attempts to update help for all modules that are installed on the computer.
Modules that don't support Updatable Help are included. This value might generate errors when the
command encounters modules that don't support Updatable Help. Instead, run Update-Help
without
parameters.
The Module parameter of the Update-Help
cmdlet doesn't accept the full path of a module file
or module manifest file. To update help for a module that isn't in a $env:PSModulePath
location,
import the module into the current session before you run the Update-Help
command.
Type: | String[] |
Aliases: | Name |
Position: | 0 |
Default value: | None |
Required: | False |
Accept pipeline input: | True |
Accept wildcard characters: | True |
-Recurse
Performs a recursive search for help files in the specified directory. This parameter is valid only when the command uses the SourcePath parameter.
Type: | SwitchParameter |
Position: | Named |
Default value: | None |
Required: | False |
Accept pipeline input: | False |
Accept wildcard characters: | False |
-Scope
Specifies the system scope where help is updated. Updates at the AllUsers scope require
administrative privileges on Windows systems. The -Scope
parameter was introduced in PowerShell
Core version 6.1.
CurrentUser is the default scope for help files in PowerShell 6.1 and above. AllUsers can be
specified to install or update help for all users. On Unix systems sudo
privileges are required to
update help for all users. For example: sudo pwsh -c Update-Help
The acceptable values are:
- CurrentUser
- AllUsers
Type: | UpdateHelpScope |
Position: | Named |
Default value: | CurrentUser |
Required: | False |
Accept pipeline input: | True |
Accept wildcard characters: | False |
-SourcePath
Specifies a file system folder where Update-Help
gets updated help files, instead of downloading
them from the internet. Enter the path of a folder. Don't specify a file name or file name
extension. You can pipeline a folder, such as one from the Get-Item
or Get-ChildItem
cmdlets, to
Update-Help
.
By default, Update-Help
downloads updated help files from the internet. Use SourcePath when
you've used the Save-Help
cmdlet to download updated help files to a directory.
To specify a default value for SourcePath, go to Group Policy, Computer Configuration,
and Set the default source path for Update-Help. This Group Policy setting prevents users from
using Update-Help
to download help files from the internet.
For more information, see about_Group_Policy_Settings.
Type: | String[] |
Aliases: | Path |
Position: | 1 |
Default value: | None |
Required: | False |
Accept pipeline input: | False |
Accept wildcard characters: | False |
-UICulture
Specifies UI culture values for which this cmdlet gets updated help files. Enter one or more
language codes, such as es-ES
, a variable that contains culture objects, or a command that gets
culture objects, such as a Get-Culture
or Get-UICulture
command. Wildcard characters are not
permitted.
By default, Update-Help
gets help files in the UI culture set for the operating system or its
fallback culture. If you specify the UICulture parameter, Update-Help
only looks for help for
the specified language.
Beginning in PowerShell 7.4, you can use a partial language code, such as en
to download help in
English for any region.
Note
Ubuntu 18.04 changed the default locale setting to C.UTF.8
, which isn't a recognized UI
culture. Update-Help
silently fails to download help unless you use this parameter with a
supported locale like en-US
. This could occur on any platform that uses an unsupported value.
Type: | CultureInfo[] |
Position: | 2 |
Default value: | None |
Required: | False |
Accept pipeline input: | False |
Accept wildcard characters: | False |
-UseDefaultCredentials
Indicates that Update-Help
runs the command, including the internet download, using the
credentials of the current user. By default, the command runs without explicit credentials.
This parameter is effective only when the web download uses NT LAN Manager (NTLM), negotiate, or Kerberos-based authentication.
Type: | SwitchParameter |
Position: | Named |
Default value: | None |
Required: | False |
Accept pipeline input: | False |
Accept wildcard characters: | False |
-WhatIf
Shows what would happen if the cmdlet runs. The cmdlet isn't run.
Type: | SwitchParameter |
Aliases: | wi |
Position: | Named |
Default value: | False |
Required: | False |
Accept pipeline input: | False |
Accept wildcard characters: | False |
Inputs
You can pipe a directory path object to this cmdlet.
You can pipe a module object to this cmdlet.
Outputs
None
This cmdlet returns no output.
Notes
To update help for the core PowerShell modules, that contain the commands that are installed with
PowerShell, or any module in the $PSHOME\Modules
directory, start PowerShell with the option to
Run as administrator.
Only members of the Administrators group on the computer can update help for the core PowerShell
modules, the commands that are installed together with PowerShell, and for modules in the
$PSHOME\Modules
folder. If you don't have permission to update help files, you can read the help
files online. For example, Get-Help Update-Help -Online
.
Modules are the smallest unit of updatable help. You can't update help for a particular cmdlet. To
find the module containing a particular cmdlet, use the ModuleName property of the Get-Command
cmdlet, for example, (Get-Command Update-Help).ModuleName
.
Because help files are installed in the module directory, the Update-Help
cmdlet can install
updated help file only for modules that are installed on the computer. However, the Save-Help
cmdlet can save help for modules that aren't installed on the computer.
The Update-Help
cmdlet was introduced in Windows PowerShell 3.0. It doesn't work in earlier
versions of PowerShell. On computers that have both Windows PowerShell 2.0 and Windows
PowerShell 3.0, use the Update-Help
cmdlet in a Windows PowerShell 3.0 session to download and
update help files. The help files are available to both Windows PowerShell 2.0 and Windows
PowerShell 3.0.
The Update-Help
and Save-Help
cmdlets use the following ports to download help files: Port 80
for HTTP and port 443 for HTTPS.
Update-Help
supports all modules and the core PowerShell snap-ins. It doesn't support any other
snap-ins.
To update help for a module in a location that isn't listed in the $env:PSModulePath
environment
variable, import the module into the current session and then run an Update-Help
command. Run
Update-Help
without parameters or use the Module parameter to specify the module name. The
Module parameter of the Update-Help
and Save-Help
cmdlets doesn't accept the full path of a
module file or module manifest file.
Any module can support Updatable Help. For instructions for supporting Updatable Help in the modules that you author, see Supporting Updatable Help.
The Update-Help
and Save-Help
cmdlets aren't supported on Windows Preinstallation Environment
(Windows PE).
Related Links
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