Get-windowsfeature -name Updateservices -

Alex opened PowerShell as an administrator—no GUI, no clicking through Server Manager. Just a blinking cursor. The goal was simple: verify whether the core WSUS role, including its management console and database components, was installed on WSUS-01.

Get-WindowsFeature -Name UpdateServices The command ran almost instantly. PowerShell returned a concise table: get-windowsfeature -name updateservices

Display Name Name Install State ------------ ---- ------------- [ ] Windows Server Update Services UpdateServices Available The [ ] bracket was empty. The said “Available,” not “Installed.” Alex’s suspicion was confirmed: the WSUS role was not installed on the server named WSUS-01. No wonder patches weren’t deploying—the service wasn’t even there. Alex opened PowerShell as an administrator—no GUI, no

Alex typed:

Get-WindowsFeature -Name UpdateServices InstallState : Installed Alex smiled. The cmdlet’s simple output told a complete story—from absence to action, from unknown to known. In the world of system administration, sometimes the most powerful tool is the one that tells you exactly what you have, so you can decide what to do next. Get-WindowsFeature -Name UpdateServices is your precise, scriptable, and safe way to check if the WSUS server role is present on a Windows machine—saving you from manual GUI checks and enabling automated server management at scale. In the world of system administration

Get-WindowsFeature -Name UpdateServices InstallState : Available Two hours later, after running Install-WindowsFeature and a reboot: