about_Locations
Short description
Describes how to access items from the working location in PowerShell.
Long description
The current working location is the default location to which commands point. In other words, this is the location that PowerShell uses if you don't supply an explicit path to the item or location that's affected by the command.
Note
PowerShell supports multiple runspaces per process. Each runspace has its own
current directory. This isn't the same as the current directory of the
PowerShell process: [System.Environment]::CurrentDirectory
.
For example, you might set your current working location to the following location:
Set-Location C:\Program Files\PowerShell
As a result, all commands are processed from this location unless another path is explicitly provided.
PowerShell maintains the current working location for each drive even when the
drive isn't the current drive. This allows you to access items from the
current working location by referring only to the drive of another location.
For example, suppose that your current working location is C:\Windows
. Now,
suppose you use the following command to change your current working location
to the HKLM:
drive:
Set-Location HKLM:
Although your current location is now the registry drive, you can still access
items in the C:\Windows
directory using the C:
drive, as shown in the
following example:
Get-ChildItem C:
PowerShell remembers that your current working location for that drive is the
Windows
directory, so it retrieves items from that directory. The results
would be the same if you ran the following command:
Get-ChildItem C:\Windows
In PowerShell, you can use the Get-Location
command to determine the current
working location, and you can use the Set-Location
command to set the current
working location. For example, the following command sets the current working
location to the Windows
directory of the C:
drive:
Set-Location C:\Windows
After you set the current working location, you can still access items from other drives by including the drive name (followed by a colon) in the command, as shown in the following example:
Get-ChildItem HKLM:\software
The example command retrieves a list of items in the Software container of the
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE
hive in the registry.
PowerShell also allows you to use special characters to represent the current
working location and its parent location. To represent the current working
location, use a single period. To represent the parent of the current working
location, use two periods. For example, the following specifies the System
subdirectory in the current working location:
Get-ChildItem .\System
If the current working location is C:\Windows
, this command returns a list of
all the items in C:\Windows\System
. However, if you use two periods, the
parent directory of the current working directory is used, as shown in the
following example:
Get-ChildItem ..\"Program Files"
In this case, PowerShell treats the two periods as the C: drive, so the
command retrieves all the items in the C:\Program Files
directory.
A path beginning with a backslash (\
) identifies a path from the root of the
current drive. For example, if your current working location is
C:\Program Files\PowerShell
, the root of your drive is C:\
. Therefore, the
following command lists all items in the C:\Windows
directory:
Get-ChildItem \Windows
If you don't specify a path beginning with a drive name, backslash (\
), or
period (.
) when supplying the name of a container or item, the container or
item is assumed to be located in the current working location. For example, if
your current working location is C:\Windows
, the following command returns
all the items in the C:\Windows\System
directory:
Get-ChildItem System
If you specify a filename rather than a directory name, PowerShell returns details about that file (assuming that file is located in the current working location).