If you’re like me, you built a new AD for testing. And if you’re also like me, you imported a whole bunch of users into your AD. Some of those users likely had passwords that didn’t quite meet the domain criteria. If that happened, that means those users are disabled.
In past posts, I wrote about moving users into a different OU. Now, we’re going to change passwords for these users so we can enable them later.
For this, you’ll need a CSV in this format below. I took some liberties and retrieved a large amount of random passwords from manytools.org. There are many websites that can do this, I just like the format that manytools provided. I just pasted the passwords into the second column, the first column being the sAMAccountname of the user.
sAMAccountName | Password |
Zuzana.Burris | gz9DndwkBh8s |
Zandra.Caig | 9eC3bcJ2SzA5 |
PowerShell code:
Import-Module Active Directory
$Resetpassword = Import-Csv "C:\path_to_username_password_file.csv"
#Store CSV file into $Resetpassword variable
foreach ($User in $Resetpassword) {
#For each name or account in the CSV file $Resetpassword, reset the password with the Set-ADAccountPassword string below
$User.sAMAccountName
$User.Password
Set-ADAccountPassword -Identity $User.sAMAccountName -Reset -NewPassword (ConvertTo-SecureString $User.Password -AsPlainText -force)
}
Write-Host " Passwords changed "
$total = ($Resetpassword).count
$total
Write-Host "Accounts passwords have been reset..."
Showing the Results
Once we’ve set the passwords, we need a way of knowing when or if the passwords were last set for a user. Referring back to the Get-ADuser cmdlet, we can look at the -passwordlastset property.
Get-ADUser -filter * -properties passwordlastset | sort-object samaccountname | select-object samaccountname, passwordlastset, passwordneverexpires | Out-GridView