This topic has not yet been rated - Rate this topic

Get-SPPluggableSecurityTrimmer

Published: July 16, 2012

Applies to:  SharePoint Server 2013 Enterprise 

Gets pluggable security trimmers added to a profile service application proxy.

Get-SPPluggableSecurityTrimmer [-UserProfileApplicationProxyId] <Guid> [-AssignmentCollection <SPAssignmentCollection>]

Parameters

Parameter Required Type Description

UserProfileApplicationProxyId

Required

System.Guid

Specifies the ID of the User Profile service application proxy to which the pluggable security trimmers have been added.

The type must be a valid GUID, in the form 12345678-90ab-cdef-1234-567890bcdefgh.

AssignmentCollection

Optional

Microsoft.SharePoint.PowerShell.SPAssignmentCollection

Manages objects for the purpose of proper disposal. Use of objects, such as SPWeb or SPSite, can use large amounts of memory and use of these objects in Windows PowerShell scripts requires proper memory management. Using the SPAssignment object, you can assign objects to a variable and dispose of the objects after they are needed to free up memory. When SPWeb, SPSite, or SPSiteAdministration objects are used, the objects are automatically disposed of if an assignment collection or the Global parameter is not used.

noteNote:

When the Global parameter is used, all objects are contained in the global store. If objects are not immediately used, or disposed of by using the Stop-SPAssignment command, an out-of-memory scenario can occur.

Detailed Description

Use the Get-SPPluggableSecurityTrimmer cmdlet to list the pluggable security trimmers that have been added to a User Profile service application proxy.

Input Types

Return Types

-------------------EXAMPLE---------------------

$pr = Get-SPServiceApplicationProxy | ? {$_.TypeName.Contains("Profile")}
Get-SPPluggableSecurityTrimmer -UserProfileApplicationProxyId $pr.Id

This example gets a list of the pluggable security trimmers that are associated with the User Profile service application proxy.

Change History

Date Description

July 16, 2012

Initial publication

Did you find this helpful?
(1500 characters remaining)
© 2013 Microsoft. All rights reserved.