Analysis updated 2026-05-18
Generate automated reports on which machines have valid Windows licenses.
Run real-time health checks against KMS servers.
Push settings to client machines from a centralized console via PowerShell.
View license usage trends on a dashboard.
| biplobroy01/kmspisco-v2-portable | deermiya/visio-skill | uigiuf/codex-visio-replica-workflow | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Stars | 65 | 61 | 47 |
| Language | PowerShell | PowerShell | PowerShell |
| Setup difficulty | moderate | moderate | moderate |
| Complexity | — | 3/5 | 3/5 |
| Audience | ops devops | developer | developer |
Figures from each repo's GitHub metadata at analysis time.
Requires configuring a settings file with a KMS server address, repository tags conflict with the described enterprise purpose.
This repository presents itself as a Windows license management tool for IT administrators. According to the README, it is aimed at system administrators who need to monitor and manage Microsoft Key Management Service (KMS) setups across many computers in an organization. The README describes several advertised features: automated reports on which machines have valid licenses, real-time health checks for KMS servers, a centralized console to push settings to client machines via PowerShell, and a dashboard showing license usage trends. The installation steps say to download an executable, run it with administrator privileges, and configure a settings file with your KMS server address. The tech stack listed in the README is PowerShell and C# on .NET 8, using Windows Management Instrumentation (WMI) and the slmgr.vbs scripting interface that Windows exposes for license management tasks. It is worth noting that the repository name and its associated tags (including "activator", "free-windows", and "free-windows-keys") suggest the actual download may be unrelated to the enterprise management description in the README. The README text reads more like marketing copy than documentation for a real codebase, and no source code files are shown in the repository description. Potential users should approach this with caution and verify what the downloaded executable actually does before running it on any system.
A described KMS license management tool for Windows IT admins, though its repository tags suggest the actual download may be a Windows activator rather than enterprise software.
Mainly PowerShell. The stack also includes PowerShell, C#, .NET 8.
Setup difficulty is rated moderate, with roughly 30min to a first successful run.
Mainly ops devops.
This repo across BitVibe Labs
Verify against the repo before relying on details.