Merge pull request #9744 from v-kikl/kk-wdac-edits-task-33881267

Kk wdac edits task 33881267
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Daniel Simpson
2021-07-08 06:50:49 -07:00
committed by GitHub

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@ -27,6 +27,14 @@ ms.technology: mde
Windows Defender Application Control (WDAC) can control what runs on Windows 10 by setting policies that specify whether a driver or application is trusted. A policy includes *policy rules* that control options such as audit mode, and *file rules* (or *file rule levels*) that specify how applications are identified and trusted. Windows Defender Application Control (WDAC) can control what runs on Windows 10 by setting policies that specify whether a driver or application is trusted. A policy includes *policy rules* that control options such as audit mode, and *file rules* (or *file rule levels*) that specify how applications are identified and trusted.
## Getting started with commdlets
Some of the [SKUs](feature-availability.md) that support our PowerShell commandlets [(ConfigCI Module)](powershell/module/configci/?view=windowsserver2019-ps) support but do not have the module installed on the box.
**Steps to install the module:**
- Install-Module "ConfigCI"
- Import-Module "ConfigCI"
## Windows Defender Application Control policy rules ## Windows Defender Application Control policy rules
To modify the policy rule options of an existing WDAC policy XML, use [Set-RuleOption](/powershell/module/configci/set-ruleoption). The following examples show how to use this cmdlet to add and remove a rule option on an existing WDAC policy: To modify the policy rule options of an existing WDAC policy XML, use [Set-RuleOption](/powershell/module/configci/set-ruleoption). The following examples show how to use this cmdlet to add and remove a rule option on an existing WDAC policy: