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How to capture debug stream in Azure Automation runbooks

Original product version:   Azure Automation
Original KB number:   4022768

Summary

By default Azure Automation does not capture any debug stream data.  Only output, error, and warning data are captured as well as verbose data if the runbook is configured to capture it.

In order to capture debug stream data, you have to perform two actions in your runbooks:

  1. Set the variable $GLOBAL:DebugPreference="Continue" which tells PowerShell to continue whenever a debug message is encountered. The $GLOBAL: portion tells PowerShell to do this in the global scope rather than whatever local scope the script is in at the time the statement is executed.
  2. Redirect the debug stream that we don't capture to a stream that we do capture such as output. This is done by setting PowerShell redirection against the statement to be executed.  For more information on PowerShell redirection, see About_Redirection.

Example:

Given the following runbook:

Write-Output "This is an output message."  
Write-Debug "This is a debug message."

If this runbook were to be executed as it is, the output pane for the runbook job in Azure Automation would display the following:

This is an output message.

Given the following runbook:

Write-Output "This is an output message."  
$GLOBAL:DebugPreference="Continue"  
Write-Debug "This is a debug message." 5>&1

If this runbook were to be executed, the output pane would now display the following:

This is an output message.  
This is a debug message.

This occurs because the statement $GLOBAL:DebugPreference="Continue" tells PowerShell to display debug messages and then continue and the addition of 5>&1 to the end of any statement, which tells PowerShell to redirect stream 5 (debug) to stream 1 (output).

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