This is the built-in help made by Microsoft for the command 'Get-OdbcPerfCounter', in PowerShell version 4 - as retrieved from
Windows version 'Microsoft Windows 8.1 Enterprise' PowerShell help files on 2016-06-23.
For PowerShell version 3 and up, where you have Update-Help, this command was run just before creating the web pages from the help files.
Gets connection pooling Performance Monitor counters.
Get-OdbcPerfCounter [[-Platform] <String>] [-AsJob] [-CimSession <CimSession>] [-ThrottleLimit <Int32>] [<CommonParameters>]
The Get-OdbcPerfCounter cmdlet gets the Open Database Connectivity (ODBC) connection pooling performance monitor counters.
For more information about ODBC and performance counters, see Microsoft Open Database Connectivity (ODBC) (http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms710252.aspx) and
ODBC Performance Counters (http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/windows/desktop/ms709288.aspx) on the Microsoft Developer Network.
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Online Version: http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/p/?linkid=287607
Disable-OdbcPerfCounter
Enable-OdbcPerfCounter
N:Wdac
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Example 1: Get ODBC Performance Counter setting on a 32-bit platform
PS C:\> Get-OdbcPerfCounter -Platform "32-bit"
This command gets the ODBC Performance Counter setting on a 32-bit platform.
Example 2: Get ODBC Performance Counter setting on both platforms
PS C:\> Get-OdbcPerfCounter
This command gets the ODBC Performance Counter setting on both 32-bit and 64-bit platforms.
Example 3: Store ODBC Performance Counter setting for a 32-bit platform
PS C:\> $perfCounter = Get-OdbcPerfCounter -Platform "32-bit"
This command gets the ODBC Performance Counter setting on a 32-bit platform, and then stores the result in the $perfCounter variable.