Uptime in windows server 2008 r2
Search related threads. Remove From My Forums. Answered by:. Archived Forums. Sign in to vote. Wednesday, August 30, AM. You could check the system event log for The Event log service was started Regards, Dave Patrick Thanks for your reply!
Search related threads. Remove From My Forums. Answered by:. Archived Forums. The Official Scripting Guys Forum! If your answer is "yes," you know what to do. Dive in and help somebody! If your answer is "no," welcome to our fun little world! We'd recommend that you first head over to the Script Center, get your feet wet, and then come back to either ask or answer questions. We can't be everywhere at once we know—shocking!
The Microsoft Scripting Guys 1 3. Sign in to vote. I used Uptime. Thursday, August 4, AM. If you found this post helpful, please give it a "Helpful" vote. If it answered your question, remember to mark it as an "Answer". Friday, August 12, PM. The below article should help. It has various ways to get the information on system uptime.
I have referred to that link, however it did not meet my expectation because I would like to know the reboot history whereby the Uptime. Why do you say it doesn't work? It works fine and can show history. It does work on some Server systems as you can see in the example below but no all of them: uptime. Thursday, August 11, PM. I believe we are on the right track but there must be something else.
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The Overflow Blog. Podcast Making Agile work for data science. Stack Gives Back Featured on Meta. Use this article as a future reference. The article will be broken up into two main parts; checking server uptime and finding historical Windows uptime. The first part will focus on finding how much time the computer has been up since its last reboot. But know that by using PowerShell Remoting , you can also perform these checks remotely excluding task manager.
Once Task Manager is open, click on the Performance tab. Under the Performance tab, you will see a label of Up Time.
Event Viewer is very commonly used by most sysadmins on a regular basis, which makes it a great option for a non-command line-related method of retrieving uptime. Follow these steps to identify uptime via Event Viewer:. You can then compare the two times to create a total uptime. Also, since many instances of these events are stored, we can query the history of uptimes!
PowerShell has a few different ways you can retrieve uptime. You can either query WMI or use the Windows event log.