Set the system settings tag list.
Set-RDMSystemSettingsTags [-Tags] <string[]> [-ForcePromptAnswer <DialogResult[]>] [-WhatIf]
[-Confirm] [<CommonParameters>]
Set the system tag list for the data source. This replaces all existing system tags. System tags help organize and find related entries, improving search, filters, and dashboard overviews. System tags can be assigned to entries across all vaults.
Tags containing spaces are automatically quoted. Duplicate tags (case-insensitive) are removed. Tag names cannot contain the " character. Whitespace is trimmed from tag names.
Requires data source settings permission.
PS C:\> $tags = @("Production", "Development", "Test")
PS C:\> Set-RDMSystemSettingsTags -Tags $tags
Set the system tag list with three tags.
PS C:\> $tags = @(Get-RDMSystemSettingsTags)
PS C:\> $tags += "NewTag"
PS C:\> Set-RDMSystemSettingsTags -Tags $tags
Get current system tags, add a new one, and save the updated list. Using @() ensures $tags is always an array for array operations like +=.
PS C:\> Set-RDMSystemSettingsTags -Tags @()
Clear all system tags.
PS C:\> Get-RDMSystemSettingsTags | Where-Object { $_ -match "^Prod" } | Set-RDMSystemSettingsTags
Pipeline usage to filter and set system tags. Get all tags, keep only those starting with 'Prod', and save the filtered list.
PS C:\> Set-RDMSystemSettingsTags -Tags @("Tag with spaces", "SimpleTag") -WhatIf
Preview changes without applying them. Shows how tags with spaces are handled.
Prompts you for confirmation before running the cmdlet.
Type: System.Management.Automation.SwitchParameter
DefaultValue: False
SupportsWildcards: false
Aliases:
- cf
ParameterSets:
- Name: (All)
Position: Named
IsRequired: false
ValueFromPipeline: false
ValueFromPipelineByPropertyName: false
ValueFromRemainingArguments: false
DontShow: false
AcceptedValues: []
HelpMessage: ''
Switch to use with caution. It will automatically answer prompt asking yes/no, yes/no/cancel, or ok/cancel questions. In case of multiple prompts, multiple values can be passed to this parameter. Here are the accepted values:
Yes: Accept the prompt. Cover the OK and Automatic value.
No: Refuse the yes/no/cancel prompt. "Cancel" is the fallback option if there is no "No" option.
Cancel: Cancel the yes/no/cancel prompt. "No" is the fallback option if there is no "Cancel" option.
Type: System.Windows.Forms.DialogResult[]
DefaultValue: ''
SupportsWildcards: false
Aliases: []
ParameterSets:
- Name: (All)
Position: Named
IsRequired: false
ValueFromPipeline: false
ValueFromPipelineByPropertyName: false
ValueFromRemainingArguments: false
DontShow: false
AcceptedValues: []
HelpMessage: ''
Array of system tags to set. Pass an empty array to clear all tags.
Type: System.String[]
DefaultValue: ''
SupportsWildcards: false
Aliases: []
ParameterSets:
- Name: (All)
Position: 0
IsRequired: true
ValueFromPipeline: true
ValueFromPipelineByPropertyName: false
ValueFromRemainingArguments: false
DontShow: false
AcceptedValues: []
HelpMessage: ''
Shows what would happen if the cmdlet runs. The cmdlet is not run.
Type: System.Management.Automation.SwitchParameter
DefaultValue: False
SupportsWildcards: false
Aliases:
- wi
ParameterSets:
- Name: (All)
Position: Named
IsRequired: false
ValueFromPipeline: false
ValueFromPipelineByPropertyName: false
ValueFromRemainingArguments: false
DontShow: false
AcceptedValues: []
HelpMessage: ''
This cmdlet supports the common parameters: -Debug, -ErrorAction, -ErrorVariable, -InformationAction, -InformationVariable, -OutBuffer, -OutVariable, -PipelineVariable, -ProgressAction, -Verbose, -WarningAction, and -WarningVariable. For more information, see about_CommonParameters.
Tag name to add to the system tag list.
For more information, type "Get-Help Set-RDMSystemSettingsTags -detailed". For technical information, type "Get-Help Set-RDMSystemSettingsTags -full".