52

As a Windows administrator, what tools do you feel you cannot live without?

HopelessN00b
  • 54,273

50 Answers50

40

3rd party tools are great, but before I start there, the basic ones you get with the system:

  • Computer Management
  • Event Viewer
  • Services Console
  • Perfmon
  • Active Directory Users and Computers
  • Active Directory Domains and Trusts
  • Active Directory Sites and Services
  • Group Policy Management Console (okay, so you download this one)
  • The command line itself with
    • netstat
    • nbtstat
    • ipconfig
    • net
    • findstr
    • netsh
  • Internet Explorer/Firefox
  • Scripting tool like VBScript/PowerShell/Perl
  • Notepad

Other Tools:

32

SysInternals Suite

Click Ok
  • 956
16

I can't live without PowerShell.

Naseer
  • 121
14

WinDirStat is great for finding out how all your disk space it getting used.

10

I always post this one, but it remains true. Beyond Compare is the best folder & file diff program. It is so ridiculously useful for maintenance work and updating, plus it does built-in FTP

Glenn Slaven
  • 2,470
10

Never underestimate the power of a really good text editor. I've used UltraEdit for years and couldn't live without it. I've tried moving to Notepad++, Editplus, and a few other text editors and I always end up frustrated and back using UltraEdit. You can also get a U3 version that lives on a flash drive.

10

Robocopy.

Recursive copying with solid reporting and allows you to update changed only. Used to be part of the windows resource kit, but i think it's distributed with Vista now.

Mark Nold
  • 285
7
  • ProcessExplorer
  • PS Tools
  • Perl
  • Perfmon
  • TextPad/Notepad++
  • Terminal Services
  • Cygwin
Moshe
  • 582
7

A Linux LiveCD (Knoppix preferably)

And processexplorer

6

WMIC lets you do pretty much anything to any networked windows computer.

Some fun things to try:

wmic computersystem get name

What user is currently logged into the system:

wmic netlogin get name,lastlogon

Users who have logged into a system, and when they last logged in:

wmic os get lastbootuptime

When was the last time the machine booted; (do you have a machine not getting updates?)

wmic product get name,verion

Finds applications installed with a specific name:

wmic product where 'name = "%Product Name%"' get name

Also remember you can run these on networked systems:

wmic /node:"computername1" os list brief
boflynn
  • 661
6

The SysInternals suite, live edition:

http://live.sysinternals.com/

hexedit or another hex editor.

pomarc
  • 131
5

I'd throw 7-zip into the pool. Free/Open source and opens most compression formats. I use it often for moving files from one server to another (updates and/or images).

3

Total Commander - Norton Commander look-a-like for Windows. I use this all the time, it's simply the best (!) file manager. Also it's shareware, so if you can live with a startup nag-screen it's free.

Ultraedit - Not free, but nothing beats this text editor. Once you go down the path of ultraedit, there's no turning back.

putty - It just works.

3

These are more for the desktop/laptop power users:

  • safarp: small and fast Add/Remove Programs
  • launchy: keystroke launchyer
  • console: multi-tabbed cmd.exe, (and then some)
  • jkdefrag (portable):lite-weight defragger
  • AnVir task manager: manager for running processes, services, and startup programs (commercial but has a lite free version).
  • Notepad++: Probably best text-editor available for windows.
  • WinMerge: visual diff/merge tool
hasen
  • 2,604
3

Batch files :-)

3

shutdown - can shut down a non-responding host remotely

shutdown -r -t 0 -f -m <machine>

taskkill - kill processes from the commandline

taskkill /pid <pid>

psexec - the windows equivalent of ssh (from sysinternals, as previously noted)

3

TreeSizeFree for figuring out what's using all your storage space.

http://www.jam-software.com/freeware/index.shtml

Nic
  • 13,695
2
2

Windows Installer Cleanup Utility - saved my bacon multiple times.

Visual C# Express - really! The .NET framework has a LOT of useful classes for automating admin tasks, and I've rolled my own small army of useful utilities.

2

Ultra Vnc SC a free remote desktop tool. Some features: You only need one exe to pass to client, no install, Can be customized and You also can translate this tool, got a file transfer and chat.

adopilot
  • 1,541
2

I find Agent Ransack or its non-free version, File Locator Pro, to be much much more effective than the basic "Search" function of Windows (which was/is broken on XP)

2

A new open source to alternative to ProcessExplorer is ProcessHacker.

You can install it or just run it off a thumb drive. If you install it you can take advantage of some of the special features. On such feature is a kernel mode driver that acts as a proxy to query process information. This is apparently to avoid UAC prompts in Vista. Another feature is the ability to launch ProcessHacker instead of task manager from the ctrl+alt+delete menu. Finally, you can set ProcessHacker to run at login.

2

I have been testing Spiceworks for IT management (inventory, monitoring, reporting, tracking). So far, made my life easier, so let's toss it on the pile.

Skaughty
  • 733
1

Well I'd say http://ratsauce.sourceforge.net/ but then I would say that, wouldn't I :-)

John Rennie
  • 7,806
1

If for some reason you don't want to get and install the whole Cygwin GNU utilities for Win32 are useful. It's nice to fire up cmd and use grep, wget, tail, etc.

sniffer to see what exactly is happening on the wire [ unless you can tap somewhere on the switch with port mirroring].

Far Manager for those like me who still prefer console rather over Windows Explorer. and yeah - it's open source now! Ready to use builds are here.

Notepad++ was already mentioned, but Notepad2 - not. It's very useful Notepad replacement. It has syntax hilight, block operations, different encoding.

pQd
  • 30,537
1

testdisk - saved my ass a when my raid screwed up, was able to copy the data off it to another drive even though it wasn't showing up in windows. now i can't live without it.

1

Logparser is a must.

1

Remote Desktop / Terminal Services

Jonas K
  • 131
1

A couple of things that make my life easier:

Terminals - multi tab terminal services/remote desktop client.

and

Nmap - network scanner extraordinaire

jhayes
  • 486
1

I live by TaskInfo, an integrated utility that beats Task Manager and Systems Information hands down.

1

RD tabs http://www.avianwaves.com/Tech/Tools/RDTabs/ is a great RDP replacement. It allows saving connections like bookmarks, tabs, pop-outs, screen capture! Works really well!

0

Apart from the regular Windows MMC tools and OS native support tools, these are a few I use regularly. Sysinternals, Resource Kit tools, WinDBG, WMI scripts, Performance & reliability monitor and PowerShell scripts

ravikanth
  • 308
0

For Sysadmins that have a laptop, I would add NetProfiles .

Also, the website http://portablefreeware.com is absolutely awesome.

djangofan
  • 4,230
0

TextPad is great.
VirtuaWin is fantastic if one is a fan of virtual desktops.
PuTTY
UltraVNC (because VNC will need to be used eventually, even despite RDP)
I personally like using Cygwin over cmd/command for console
Definitely Wireshark
All of the Administrator Tools that come with Windows

Carlos Nunez
  • 131
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  • 5
0

Heh... Norton Comander.. I like console (since DOS/Windows 3.x) and i use FAR Manager (farmanager.com) as my file manager for a long time.

Now new version (2.0) with Unicode support(!) is availible. And this version not shareware, it's FREE (BSD-like license). It's still in "alpha" and a bit tricky to install but fully working (even x64).

Sergey
  • 2,141
0

More votes for PowerShell, Notepad++, PuTTY, pscp, Cygwin, sdelete, WinDirStat, and System Internals.

Also some sort of Remote control software be it UltraVNC, RDP, or whatever.

0

smsniff from NIRSOFT. The quick network sniffer.

http://www.nirsoft.net/utils/smsniff.html

Fiddler a good HTTP debugging porxy with really good SSL support http://www.fiddler2.com/fiddler2/

ggonsalv
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  • 1
  • 12
0

nircmd.exe

Invaluable command line tool I primarily use for killing programs and processes although it does allow a fairly high degree of control over hardware.

Marko Carter
  • 4,212
0

SciTE for text editing and Servant Salamander as file manager. Unfortunately, Salamander is a commercial product, but it is exceptionally good for working with files and folders.

grigoryvp
  • 3,975
0

XCopy (although RoboCopy is more capable) and Ping (cmd), along with .bat files for scripting.

Lazlow
  • 383
0

Richcopy, a released tool that used to be used internally in Microsoft. It's a ultimate copying tool that is much better than robocopy.

kentchen
  • 754
0

RDtabs from Avian Waves for managing and organising RDP connections

Arcass
  • 151
0

Remote Desktop Manager is awesome, It centralize all my remote connections (Including RDP, Putty, SQL Server, HTTP Interfaces, (S)FTP, CIFS shares, OpenVPN connections...

It's really a must have, all this for free, but the enterprise edition allows you some nice thing like storing connections settings in a database to push modifications to the others admins)

http://remotedesktopmanager.com/

Kedare
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0

Terracopy or Richcopy. Quick file transfers. Scored points at my new job by mentioning this to my boss!

0

Ant or NAnt to run some kind of operations with easy way to check if the tasks runs ok or not, parallelize, and so on.

FerranB
  • 1,382
0
  • Active Directory - if you manage a domain this is your best friend. It centralizes all control over users/computers/printers/groups in your organizational unit into one program.

  • gpedit - the group policy editor, allows you to easily manage registry entries for groups of users at a higher level.

  • regedit - Great for making lower level tweaks to the system not available through the group policies.

0
  • Notepad2
  • Executor
  • BgInfo (on all servers)
  • LPD.exe
  • NirCmd
  • Blat
0

I still find myself firing up Sequoia View to spot the massive temp files/caches that can otherwise lie unnoticed on a volume.

Lunatik
  • 133
0

Bart PE, with a large assortment of plug-ins. Not so much for day-to-day use but for all those times when things go wrong and normal tools won't help or when something can't be achieved while the regular OS is running.

Perl. Tools such as logparser might be OK for some jobs but Perl has no limits.

Robocopy. In my opinion the best readily available copy utility for Windows. If you have a copy/move/sync operation that you can't do with Robocopy it's time to read the manual again.

0

Joeware tools and Sysinternals

benPearce
  • 321