about_Execution_Policies
Describes the PowerShell execution policies and explains how to manage them.
PowerShell's execution policy is a safety feature that controls the conditions under which PowerShell loads configuration files and runs scripts. This feature helps prevent the execution of malicious scripts.
On a Windows computer you can set an execution policy for the local computer, for the current user, or for a particular session. You can also use a Group Policy setting to set execution policies for computers and users.
Execution policies for the local computer and current user are stored in the PowerShell configuration files. You don't need to set execution policies in your PowerShell profile. The execution policy for a particular session is stored only in memory and is lost when the session is closed.
The execution policy isn't a security system that restricts user actions. For example, users can easily bypass a policy by typing the script contents at the command line when they cannot run a script. Instead, the execution policy helps users to set basic rules and prevents them from violating them unintentionally.
On non-Windows computers, the default execution policy is Unrestricted and
cannot be changed. The Set-ExecutionPolicy
cmdlet is available, but
PowerShell displays a console message that it's not supported. While
Get-ExecutionPolicy
returns Unrestricted on non-Windows platforms, the
behavior really matches Bypass because those platforms do not implement the
Windows Security Zones.
Enforcement of these policies only occurs on Windows platforms. The PowerShell execution policies are as follows:
AllSigned
- Scripts can run.
- Requires that all scripts and configuration files be signed by a trusted publisher, including scripts that you write on the local computer.
- Prompts you before running scripts from publishers that you haven't yet classified as trusted or untrusted.
- Risks running signed, but malicious, scripts.
Bypass
- Nothing is blocked and there are no warnings or prompts.
- This execution policy is designed for configurations in which a PowerShell script is built into a larger application or for configurations in which PowerShell is the foundation for a program that has its own security model.
Default
- Sets the default execution policy.
- Restricted for Windows clients.
- RemoteSigned for Windows servers.
RemoteSigned
- The default execution policy for Windows server computers.
- Scripts can run.
- Requires a digital signature from a trusted publisher on scripts and configuration files that are downloaded from the internet which includes email and instant messaging programs.
- Doesn't require digital signatures on scripts that are written on the local computer and not downloaded from the internet.
- Runs scripts that are downloaded from the internet and not signed, if the
scripts are unblocked, such as by using the
Unblock-File
cmdlet. - Risks running unsigned scripts from sources other than the internet and signed scripts that could be malicious.
Restricted
- The default execution policy for Windows client computers.
- Permits individual commands, but does not allow scripts.
- Prevents running of all script files, including formatting and configuration
files (
.ps1xml
), module script files (.psm1
), and PowerShell profiles (.ps1
).
Undefined
- There is no execution policy set in the current scope.
- If the execution policy in all scopes is Undefined, the effective execution policy is Restricted for Windows clients and RemoteSigned for Windows Server.
Unrestricted
- The default execution policy for non-Windows computers and cannot be changed.
- Unsigned scripts can run. There is a risk of running malicious scripts.
- Warns the user before running scripts and configuration files that are not from the local intranet zone.
Note
On systems that do not distinguish Universal Naming Convention (UNC) paths from internet paths, scripts that are identified by a UNC path might not be permitted to run with the RemoteSigned execution policy.
You can set an execution policy that is effective only in a particular scope.
The valid values for Scope are MachinePolicy, UserPolicy, Process, CurrentUser, and LocalMachine. LocalMachine is the default when setting an execution policy.
The Scope values are listed in precedence order. The policy that takes precedence is effective in the current session, even if a more restrictive policy was set at a lower level of precedence.
For more information, see Set-ExecutionPolicy.
MachinePolicy
Set by a Group Policy for all users of the computer.
UserPolicy
Set by a Group Policy for the current user of the computer.
Process
The Process scope only affects the current PowerShell session. The execution policy is saved in the environment variable
$env:PSExecutionPolicyPreference
, rather than the configuration file. When the PowerShell session is closed, the variable and value are deleted.CurrentUser
The execution policy affects only the current user. It's stored in the CurrentUser configuration file.
LocalMachine
The execution policy affects all users on the current computer. It's stored in the AllUsers configuration file.
To get the effective execution policy for the current PowerShell session, use
the Get-ExecutionPolicy
cmdlet.
The following command gets the effective execution policy:
Get-ExecutionPolicy
To get all of the execution policies that affect the current session and display them in precedence order:
Get-ExecutionPolicy -List
The result looks similar to the following sample output:
Scope ExecutionPolicy
----- ---------------
MachinePolicy Undefined
UserPolicy Undefined
Process Undefined
CurrentUser RemoteSigned
LocalMachine AllSigned
In this case, the effective execution policy is RemoteSigned because the execution policy for the current user takes precedence over the execution policy set for the local computer.
To get the execution policy set for a particular scope, use the Scope
parameter of Get-ExecutionPolicy
.
For example, the following command gets the execution policy for the CurrentUser scope:
Get-ExecutionPolicy -Scope CurrentUser
To change the PowerShell execution policy on your Windows computer, use the
Set-ExecutionPolicy
cmdlet. The change is effective immediately. You don't
need to restart PowerShell.
If you set the execution policy for the scopes LocalMachine or the CurrentUser, the change is saved in the configuration file and remains effective until you change it again.
If you set the execution policy for the Process scope, it's not saved in the configuration file. The execution policy is retained until the current process and any child processes are closed.
Note
In Windows Vista and later versions of Windows, to run commands that change the execution policy for the local computer, LocalMachine scope, start PowerShell with the Run as administrator option.
To change your execution policy:
Set-ExecutionPolicy -ExecutionPolicy <PolicyName>
For example:
Set-ExecutionPolicy -ExecutionPolicy RemoteSigned
To set the execution policy in a particular scope:
Set-ExecutionPolicy -ExecutionPolicy <PolicyName> -Scope <scope>
For example:
Set-ExecutionPolicy -ExecutionPolicy RemoteSigned -Scope CurrentUser
A command to change an execution policy can succeed but still not change the effective execution policy.
For example, a command that sets the execution policy for the local computer can succeed but be overridden by the execution policy for the current user.
To remove the execution policy for a particular scope, set the execution policy to Undefined.
For example, to remove the execution policy for all the users of the local computer:
Set-ExecutionPolicy -ExecutionPolicy Undefined -Scope LocalMachine
To remove the execution policy for a Scope:
Set-ExecutionPolicy -ExecutionPolicy Undefined -Scope CurrentUser
If no execution policy is set in any scope, the effective execution policy is Restricted, which is the default for Windows clients.
You can use the ExecutionPolicy parameter of pwsh.exe
to set an execution
policy for a new PowerShell session. The policy affects only the current
session and child sessions.
To set the execution policy for a new session, start PowerShell at the command
line, such as cmd.exe
or from PowerShell, and then use the
ExecutionPolicy parameter of pwsh.exe
to set the execution policy.
For example:
pwsh.exe -ExecutionPolicy AllSigned
The execution policy that you set isn't stored in the configuration file. Instead, it's
stored in the $env:PSExecutionPolicyPreference
environment variable. The
variable is deleted when you close the session in which the policy is set. You
cannot change the policy by editing the variable value.
During the session, the execution policy that is set for the session takes precedence over an execution policy that is set in the configuration file for the local computer or current user. However, it doesn't take precedence over the execution policy set by using a Group Policy.
You can use the Turn on Script Execution Group Policy setting to manage the execution policy of computers in your enterprise. The Group Policy setting overrides the execution policies set in PowerShell in all scopes.
The Turn on Script Execution policy settings are as follows:
If you disable Turn on Script Execution, scripts do not run. This is equivalent to the Restricted execution policy.
If you enable Turn on Script Execution, you can select an execution policy. The Group Policy settings are equivalent to the following execution policy settings:
Group Policy Execution Policy Allow all scripts Unrestricted Allow local scripts and remote signed scripts RemoteSigned Allow only signed scripts AllSigned If Turn on Script Execution is not configured, it has no effect. The execution policy set in PowerShell is effective.
The PowerShellExecutionPolicy.adm and PowerShellExecutionPolicy.admx files add the Turn on Script Execution policy to the Computer Configuration and User Configuration nodes in Group Policy Editor in the following paths.
For Windows XP and Windows Server 2003:
Administrative Templates\Windows Components\Windows PowerShell
For Windows Vista and later versions of Windows:
Administrative Templates\Classic Administrative Templates\Windows Components\Windows PowerShell
Policies set in the Computer Configuration node take precedence over policies set in the User Configuration node.
For more information, see about_Group_Policy_Settings.
When determining the effective execution policy for a session, PowerShell evaluates the execution policies in the following precedence order:
Group Policy: MachinePolicy
Group Policy: UserPolicy
Execution Policy: Process (or pwsh.exe -ExecutionPolicy)
Execution Policy: LocalMachine
Execution Policy: CurrentUser
In Windows, programs like Internet Explorer and Microsoft Edge add an alternate data stream to files that are downloaded. This marks the file as "coming from the Internet". If your PowerShell execution policy is RemoteSigned, PowerShell won't run unsigned scripts that are downloaded from the internet which includes email and instant messaging programs.
You can sign the script or elect to run an unsigned script without changing the execution policy.
Beginning in PowerShell 3.0, you can use the Stream parameter of the
Get-Item
cmdlet to detect files that are blocked because they were downloaded
from the internet. Use the Unblock-File
cmdlet to unblock the scripts so that
you can run them in PowerShell.
For more information, see about_Signing, Get-Item, and Unblock-File.
Note
Other methods of downloading files may not mark the files as coming from the Internet Zone. Some examples include:
curl.exe
Invoke-RestMethod
Invoke-WebRequest
When PowerShell 6 is run on Windows Server Core or Windows Nano Server under certain conditions, execution policies can fail with the following error:
AuthorizationManager check failed.
At line:1 char:1
+ C:\scriptpath\scriptname.ps1
+ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+ CategoryInfo : SecurityError: (:) [], PSSecurityException
+ FullyQualifiedErrorId : UnauthorizedAccess
PowerShell uses APIs in the Windows Desktop Shell (explorer.exe
) to validate
the Zone of a script file. The Windows Shell is not available on Windows Server
Core and Windows Nano Server.
You could also get this error on any Windows system if the Windows Desktop Shell is unavailable or unresponsive. For example, during sign on, a PowerShell logon script could start execution before the Windows Desktop is ready, resulting in failure.
Using an execution policy of ByPass or AllSigned does not require a Zone check which avoids the problem.
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