Display OU(s) from active directory.
Syntax DSGET OU OrganizationalUnitDN [-dn] [-desc] [{-s Server | -d Domain}] [-u UserName] [-p {Password | *}] [-c] [-q] [-l] [{-uc | -uco | -uci}] Key OrganizationalUnitDN Distinguished Name of the OU to view. -dn Display the distinguished name -desc Display the description -s Server to connect to (Default=the domain controller in the logon domain.) -d Domain to connect to. -u Username with which the user logs on to a remote server. -p Password (UserName or Domain\UserName or Username@domain.com) -c Report errors, but continue with the next object after any error (when you specify multiple objects) by default dsget will exit when the first error occurs. -q Quiet, suppress all output -l Display entries in a list format. By default, dsget outputs a table format. -uc Unicode format -uco Unicode format for output only -uci Unicode format for input only
Dsget can accept stdin from the keyboard, from a redirected file, or as piped output from another command e.g. DSQuery
Examples
Display the descriptions of all OUs in the current domain:
C:\> dsquery ou | dsget ou -desc
“Organisation can never be a substitute for initiative and for judgement” ~ Louis D. Brandeis
Related commands:
DSAdd - Add object.
DSMod - Modify object.
DSGet - Display object.
DSMove - Move object.
DSQuery - Search for objects.
DSRM - Delete object.
PowerShell: Get-adOrganizationalUnit - Get one or more AD OUs