Tell me more ×
Super User is a question and answer site for computer enthusiasts and power users. It's 100% free, no registration required.

I just upgraded to Windows 7 and I want to get my Powershell profile up and running.

I load PS and set the execution policy to unrestricted with my 'run as admin' powers, then put my profile in the appropriate place. I reload PS and it errors.

get-execution policy returns restricted.

However, the registry check returns unrestricted.

After a reboot, the situation remains the same.

Checking further, I observe that under Admin mode, I have Unrestricted powers, but as a regular user, I have Restricted powers.

After doing some Powershell work in XP today, I noticed that in XP, Powershell is always in admin mode. Evidently it got turned into usermode on Win7. Aargh!

How do I get my profile script to execute in regular user mode?

share|improve this question

4 Answers

I don't have any trouble with this. Here's what I tested on a pretty clean Windows 7 machine:

  • Log in as an administrator
  • Run PowerShell elevated ("as Administrator")
  • Set-ExecutionPolicy RemoteSigned
  • Log in as Guest
  • Run PowerShell
  • Get-ExecutionPolicy

Returns RemoteSigned

share|improve this answer

I would right click powershell, go to compatibility options, select "Run this program as an administrator"

If using a script, you could use start++'s sudo implementation. There is a way to do it without the tool, but it's simpler just to use the tool, and it adds some other useful tools anyway.

share|improve this answer
Yeah, but I don't want to run it as an administrator. Running as root by default is not how I like to roll. – Paul Nathan Jan 22 '10 at 18:44

Do you run it from the command line or from the start menu. For me, I only get the "unrestricted" policy if I run powershell from the start menu link.

Starting it from the command line or from another program I could only get the "restricted" policy. Couldn't find any workaround for this issue except for running powershell from the start menu link...

share|improve this answer

With Windows 7 (Ultimate in case its relevant, can't see how) I have to be in administrator mode to set the policy but once set it applies to my normal user profile (get-executionpolicy returns "Unrestricted"). When you say you move your profile to the "usual place", what exactly do you mean?

share|improve this answer

Your Answer

 
discard

By posting your answer, you agree to the privacy policy and terms of service.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.