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18.1 What Are All These Buzzwords?

First, let's take a look at some of the underlying technologies that you'll use when developing scripts.

18.1.1 ActiveX

ActiveX, the base component of a number of these technologies, enables software components to interact with one another in a networked environment, regardless of the language in which they were created. Think of ActiveX as the method developers use to specify objects that the rest of us then create and access with our scripts in whatever language we choose. Microsoft currently provides three hosts that run scripts to manipulate ActiveX objects: the Internet Information Server (IIS) web server, the Internet Explorer (IE) web browser, and the Windows Scripting Host (WSH). IIS allows scripts called from HTML pages to run on the host server, and IE runs scripts called from HTML pages on the client. WSH allows scripts to run directly or remotely on a host from a command-line or GUI interface. WSH is an integral part of the Windows operating system.

18.1.2 Windows Scripting Host (WSH)

WSH is an important technology for a number of reasons:

  • You need no other software to start scripting.

  • The development environment for WSH has no special requirements to build or compile programs; your favorite text editor will do.

  • You can execute any WSH script with a VBS, JS, or WSF extension just by double-clicking it.

  • You can actually execute scripts from the command line, directing window output to that command line. This is possible because WSH has two interpreters, one called wscript.exe, which interprets scripts in the GUI Windows environment, and one called cscript.exe, which interprets scripts in the command-line environment of a cmd.exe session. By default, if you double-click a script called myscript.vbs, the system passes that script to wscript.exe, just as if you had manually typed wscript.exe myscript.vbs. The default interpreter can be changed generally or on a per-script basis along with other settings.

  • WSH comes with a series of procedures that allow you to script interactions with the target machine. There are procedures for running programs, reading from and writing to the registry, creating and deleting files and shortcuts, manipulating the contents of files, reading and writing environment variables, mapping and removing drives, and adding, removing, and setting default printers. These procedures are native to WSH, meaning that only scripts executing under WSH can access them. Being able to access these settings is very useful when configuring users' environments, since you can now write logon scripts using VBScript or JScript if you wish.

WSH comes bundled with Windows Server 2003, Windows XP, Windows 2000, and Windows 98, and it can be downloaded from http://www.microsoft.com/msdownload/vbscript/scripting.asp and installed on Windows 95 and Windows NT 4.0 servers and workstations.

18.1.3 Active Server Pages (ASPs)

When a VBScript is wrapped inside an HTML page, it is called an Active Server Page (ASP) because it can contain dynamic (or active) content. This means that the web page displayed to the user differs depending on the results of a script incorporated as part of that web page. Imagine a web server connected to a database. You can write ASPs to contain server-side scripts that query the database and return the results to the user. You can also include client-side scripts to gather information from the user to pass with the query.

18.1.4 Active Directory Service Interfaces (ADSI)

In February 1997, Microsoft released a set of generic interfaces, called the Active Directory Service Interfaces (ADSI), to access and manipulate different directory services. ADSI is a collection of classes and methods that allow developers using any language that supports COM to access and manipulate objects on a server or in a directory service. Contrary to its name, it was written to be generic and extensible rather than specific to Active Directory. This means that developers can write code to access objects on various directory servers without the need to know vendor-specific library routines. ADSI is also extensible, so developers of other directory services can write the underlying Dynamic Link Library (DLL) code that will allow ADSI to interact with their systems. This is possible because Microsoft publishes the specifications that a directory service provider (code that implements the ADSI spec for a particular directory service) must meet to work correctly with ADSI. This means that whenever you call an ADSI procedure or reference any object via ADSI against a valid provider, you can guarantee that the procedure performs according to ADSI's formal documentation no matter who the provider is. While there are several directory service provider-specific extensions, ADSI also supports Lightweight Directory Access Protocol (LDAP), which provides the majority of functionality that most directory vendors need.

LDAP is a network protocol that is the primary mechanism for accessing directory services over TCP/IP, and it has become the de facto standard for directory service access on the Internet. A directory server simply has to support LDAP 2.0 or later, and ADSI can instantly access the directory service without a provider-specific DLL.

Natively supporting LDAP in ADSI means that the list of directory services that can be accessed is very large. For the older directories such as NT4, several vendors have written providers to support ADSI. The list of supported directory services includes the following:

  • Active Directory

  • Microsoft Exchange Server

  • Windows NT 4.0 and NT 3.51 systems

  • NetWare 3.x's bindery-based system

  • NetWare and IntraNetware 4.x's and 5.x's Novell Directory Service (NDS)

  • Netscape Commerce Server

  • Netscape iPlanet/Sun ONE

  • OpenLDAP

  • IBM's Lotus Notes

  • Microsoft's Internet Information Server (IIS) objects

  • Microsoft Commercial Internet System's (MCIS's) Address Book Server

  • Microsoft Site Server

18.1.5 ActiveX Data Objects (ADO)

In the same way that ADSI is a general set of interfaces to access and manipulate data in any directory service, ActiveX Data Objects (ADO) is a generic interface that allows developers to write scripts and applications to query and manipulate data held in a database server. For a database server to work with ADO, the database server vendor must develop an OLE DB provider. This is relevant to Active Directory because Microsoft wrote an OLE DB provider for ADSI. This allows developers to access Active Directory, or indeed any other directory service, via ADO. This provider effectively considers Active Directory a database and provides extremely fast and powerful searching capabilities. For example, using ADO, you can search Active Directory for all computers whose names begin with CF or all users whose accounts are disabled and get back the ADsPath of each one using a SQL-based query language. While it is possible to search and retrieve sets of records using standard ADSI calls, you would have to write your own set of routines to iterate through a directory service. When the developers of ADSI came to this requirement, they developed a provider so that the database searching algorithms that already existed in ADO could be leveraged for use by ADSI.

There is, however, one important caveat for ADO use with ADSI: the ADSI OLE DB provider is read-only even as of Windows Server 2003, so many of the useful ADO methods for updating data aren't available. Until this changes, you can use ADO only for searching and retrieving data.

18.1.6 Windows Management Instrumentation (WMI)

The Windows Management Instrumentation (WMI) API was developed by Microsoft in 1998 in response to the ever-growing need for developers and system administrators to have a common, scriptable API to manage the components of the Windows operating system. Before WMI, if you wanted to manage some component of the operating system, you had to resort to using one of the component-specific Win32 API's, such as the Registry API or Event Log API. Each API typically had its own implementation quirks and required way too much work to do simple tasks. The other big problem with the Win32 API's is that scripting languages such as VBScript could not use them. This really limited how much an inexperienced programmer or system administrator could do to programmatically manage systems. WMI changes all this by providing a single API that can be used to query and manage the Event Log, the Registry, processes, the filesystem, or any other operating system component. For more information on WMI, check out Chapter 26.

18.1.7 .NET and .NET Framework

Unless you've been hiding in a cave in recent years, you've undoubtedly heard of Microsoft's latest initiative, called .NET. At a high level, .NET is a move to embrace web technologies such as XML Web Services in an effort to better integrate Microsoft products and other third-party applications. At a low level, .NET is the basis for a new programming platform, including a completely new set of APIs, called the .NET Framework, to manage Microsoft-based products and develop Windows applications. Microsoft even released a new programming language in conjunction with .NET called C# (C-sharp). The .NET Framework is a new set of interfaces intended to replace the old Win32 and COM APIs. A couple of the major design goals for the .NET Framework were to make programming in a Windows environment much simpler and more consistent. The .NET Framework has two major components: the common language runtime (CLR) and the .NET Framework class library. For information on these technologies, check out Chapter 28.

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