Reputation: 677
If a computer has multiple gateways, how can I determine which is the default gateway using the PowerShell?
Upvotes: 9
Views: 67516
Reputation: 1
$ActiveNet = Get-NetAdapter –Physical |Where-Object {$_.status -eq "Up"} | select name
$Network = Get-NetIPAddress |Where-Object EnabledDefault -EQ 2 | Where-Object InterfaceAlias -EQ $ActiveNet.name | Where-Object IPv4Address -NE $null | select *
$DefautGateway = Get-NetRoute -InterfaceIndex $Network.InterfaceIndex -DestinationPrefix "0.0.0.0/0" | select NextHop
$DefautGateway.NextHop
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 677
I found it as the below which lists all active gateways, correct me if I am wrong
(Get-wmiObject Win32_networkAdapterConfiguration | ?{$_.IPEnabled}).DefaultIPGateway
Upvotes: 5
Reputation: 2596
I think this will be more cross platform:
Get-NetRoute |
where {$_.DestinationPrefix -eq '0.0.0.0/0'} |
select { $_.NextHop }
Upvotes: 14
Reputation: 54941
You need to know which of the multiple gateways are used? If so. From what I remember, when multiple gateways are available the gateway with the lowest metric("cost" based on link speed) is used. To get this, run the following command:
Get-WmiObject -Class Win32_IP4RouteTable |
where { $_.destination -eq '0.0.0.0' -and $_.mask -eq '0.0.0.0'} |
Sort-Object metric1 | select nexthop, metric1, interfaceindex
if there are multiple default gateways with the same cost, I think it's decided using the binding order of the network adapters. The only way I know to get this is using GUI and registry. To include binding order you could save the output of the script over, get the settingsid from Win32_networkadapterconfiguration (identify using interfaceindex), and read the registry key HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\System\CurrentControlSet\Services\Tcpip\Linkage\Bind. This key lists the binding order it seems, and the settingsid you get from win32_networkadapterconfiguration is the GUID they identify the device with. Then sort the gateways with equal metrics using their order in the Bind reg.key and you got your answer.
Explained in: Technet Social - NIC adapter binding
Upvotes: 6
Reputation: 201952
If you're on PowerShell v3, you can use Get-NetIPConfiguration
e.g.:
Get-NetIPConfiguration | Foreach IPv4DefaultGateway
Upvotes: 19
Reputation: 96
Use the WMI queries to pull the data that you're looking for. Below is a fairly simple example to pull the default gateway for a device specified in the first line variable. This will query the device for network adapters and display the found information (for each adapter) to the console window - pulls adapter index, adapter description, and default gateway
Shouldn't take much to expand this to process multiple devices, or process based on a list fed via an input file.
$computer = $env:COMPUTERNAME Get-WmiObject win32_networkAdapterConfiguration -ComputerName $computer | Select index,description,defaultipgateway | Format-Table -AutoSize
Upvotes: 1