willxfox Posted March 7, 2012 Share Posted March 7, 2012 I work for an IT management company where every week we have a certain person from our team who is "on call" for our managed service customers. It is my responsibility to make the change to the monitoring and email systems we have that alert when issues come up. I want to create a few scripts that go to these webpages and change the "on call" users information whether it be email or cell phone number. I am not looking for assistance for getting the scripts to make the changes as I am sure it is against the rules but I want to know if there is a way to call the scripts on a remote computer. I want to setup a webpage that has different options for each person who can be on call. When you select a certain box it will then send a request to a remote computer I have that will have the scripts on it. I know this may sounds confusing but I really just wanted to know if I can call these scripts to run on a remote computer and do the webpage changes. Thanks, Will Fox Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Moderators JLogan3o13 Posted March 7, 2012 Moderators Share Posted March 7, 2012 Hi, Willxfox. For remote execution, check out Psexec from Microsoft TechNet.http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/sysinternals/bb897553 "Profanity is the last vestige of the feeble mind. For the man who cannot express himself forcibly through intellect must do so through shock and awe" - Spencer W. Kimball How to get your question answered on this forum! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
willxfox Posted March 7, 2012 Author Share Posted March 7, 2012 Thanks for the response! Can you use Psexec from a webpage? I am looking to have it run the scripts locally on a remote server I have. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Moderators JLogan3o13 Posted March 7, 2012 Moderators Share Posted March 7, 2012 Can't hurt to try "Profanity is the last vestige of the feeble mind. For the man who cannot express himself forcibly through intellect must do so through shock and awe" - Spencer W. Kimball How to get your question answered on this forum! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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