about_Jobs
Short description
Provides information about how PowerShell background jobs run a command or expression in the background without interacting with the current session.
Long description
PowerShell concurrently runs commands and scripts through jobs. There are three jobs types provided by PowerShell to support concurrency.
RemoteJob
- Commands and scripts run on a remote session. For information, see about_Remote_Jobs.BackgroundJob
- Commands and scripts run in a separate process on the local machine.PSTaskJob
orThreadJob
- Commands and scripts run in a separate thread within the same process on the local machine. For more information, see about_Thread_Jobs.
Running scripts remotely, on a separate machine or in a separate process, provides great isolation. Any errors that occur in the remote job don't affect other running jobs or the parent session that started the job. However, the remoting layer adds overhead, including object serialization. All objects are serialized and deserialized as they're passed between the parent session and the remote (job) session. Serialization of large complex data objects can consume large amounts of compute and memory resources and transfer large amounts of data across the network.
Thread-based jobs aren't as robust as remote and background jobs, because they run in the same process on different threads. If one job has a critical error that crashes the process, then all other jobs in the process are terminated.
However, thread-based jobs require less overhead. They don't use the remoting layer or serialization. The result objects are returned as references to live objects in the current session. Without this overhead, thread-based jobs run faster and use fewer resources than the other job types.
Important
The parent session that created the job also monitors the job status and collects pipeline data. The job child process is terminated by the parent process once the job reaches a finished state. If the parent session is terminated, all running child jobs are terminated along with their child processes.
There are two ways work around this situation:
- Use
Invoke-Command
to create jobs that run in disconnected sessions. For more information, see about_Remote_Jobs. - Use
Start-Process
to create a new process rather than a job. For more information, see Start-Process.
The job cmdlets
Start-Job
- Starts a background job on a local computer.Get-Job
- Gets the background jobs that were started in the current session.Receive-Job
- Gets the results of background jobs.Stop-Job
- Stops a background job.Wait-Job
- Suppresses the command prompt until one or all jobs are complete.Remove-Job
- Deletes a background job.Invoke-Command
- The AsJob parameter creates a background job on a remote computer. You can useInvoke-Command
to run any job command remotely, includingStart-Job
.
How to start a job on the local computer
To start a background job on the local computer, use the Start-Job
cmdlet.
To write a Start-Job
command, enclose the command that the job runs in curly
braces ({}
). Use the ScriptBlock parameter to specify the command.
The following command starts a background job that runs a Get-Process
command
on the local computer.
Start-Job -ScriptBlock {Get-Process}
When you start a background job, the command prompt returns immediately, even if the job takes an extended time to complete. You can continue to work in the session without interruption while the job runs.
The Start-Job
command returns an object that represents the job. The job
object contains useful information about the job, but it doesn't contain the
job results.
You can save the job object in a variable and then use it with the other
Job cmdlets to manage the background job. The following command starts a
job object and saves the resulting job object in the $job
variable.
$job = Start-Job -ScriptBlock {Get-Process}
Beginning in PowerShell 6.0, you can use the background operator (&
) at the
end of a pipeline to start a background job. For more information, see
background operator.
Using the background operator is functionally equivalent to using the
Start-Job
cmdlet in the previous example.
$job = Get-Process &
Getting job objects
The Get-Job
cmdlet returns objects that represent the background jobs that
were started in the current session. Without parameters, Get-Job
returns all
of the jobs that were started in the current session.
Get-Job
The job object contains the state of the job, which indicates whether the job has finished. A finished job has a state of Complete or Failed. A job might also be Blocked or Running.
Id Name PSJobTypeName State HasMoreData Location Command
-- ---- ------------- ----- ----------- -------- -------
1 Job1 BackgroundJob Complete True localhost Get-Process
You can save the job object in a variable and use it to represent the job in a
later command. The following command gets the job with ID 1 and saves it in the
$job
variable.
$job = Get-Job -Id 1
Getting the results of a job
When you run a background job, the results don't appear immediately. To get
the results of a background job, use the Receive-Job
cmdlet.
The following example, the Receive-Job
cmdlet gets the results of the job
using job object in the $job
variable.
Receive-Job -Job $job
Handles NPM(K) PM(K) WS(K) VM(M) CPU(s) Id ProcessName
------- ------ ----- ----- ----- ------ -- -----------
103 4 11328 9692 56 1176 audiodg
804 14 12228 14108 100 101.74 1740 CcmExec
668 7 2672 6168 104 32.26 488 csrss
...
You can save the results of a job in a variable. The following command saves
the results of the job in the $job
variable to the $results
variable.
$results = Receive-Job -Job $job
Getting and keeping partial job results
The Receive-Job
cmdlet gets the results of a background job. If the job is
complete, Receive-Job
gets all job results. If the job is still running,
Receive-Job
gets the results that have been generated thus far. You can run
Receive-Job
commands again to get the remaining results.
By default, Receive-Job
deletes the results from the cache where job results
are stored. When you run Receive-Job
again, you get only the new
results that arrived after the first run.
The following commands show the results of Receive-Job
commands run
before the job is complete.
C:\PS> Receive-Job -Job $job
Handles NPM(K) PM(K) WS(K) VM(M) CPU(s) Id ProcessName
------- ------ ----- ----- ----- ------ -- -----------
103 4 11328 9692 56 1176 audiodg
804 14 12228 14108 100 101.74 1740 CcmExec
C:\PS> Receive-Job -Job $job
Handles NPM(K) PM(K) WS(K) VM(M) CPU(s) Id ProcessName
------- ------ ----- ----- ----- ------ -- -----------
68 3 2632 664 29 0.36 1388 ccmsetup
749 22 21468 19940 203 122.13 3644 communicator
905 7 2980 2628 34 197.97 424 csrss
1121 25 28408 32940 174 430.14 3048 explorer
Use the Keep parameter to prevent Receive-Job
from deleting the job
results that are returned. The following commands show the effect of using the
Keep parameter on a job that's not yet complete.
C:\PS> Receive-Job -Job $job -Keep
Handles NPM(K) PM(K) WS(K) VM(M) CPU(s) Id ProcessName
------- ------ ----- ----- ----- ------ -- -----------
103 4 11328 9692 56 1176 audiodg
804 14 12228 14108 100 101.74 1740 CcmExec
C:\PS> Receive-Job -Job $job -Keep
Handles NPM(K) PM(K) WS(K) VM(M) CPU(s) Id ProcessName
------- ------ ----- ----- ----- ------ -- -----------
103 4 11328 9692 56 1176 audiodg
804 14 12228 14108 100 101.74 1740 CcmExec
68 3 2632 664 29 0.36 1388 ccmsetup
749 22 21468 19940 203 122.13 3644 communicator
905 7 2980 2628 34 197.97 424 csrss
1121 25 28408 32940 174 430.14 3048 explorer
Waiting for the results
If you run a command that takes a long time to complete, you can use the
properties of the job object to determine when the job is complete. The
following command uses the Get-Job
object to get all the background jobs in
the current session.
Get-Job
The results appear in a table. The status of the job appears in the State column.
Id Name PSJobTypeName State HasMoreData Location Command
-- ---- ------------- ----- ----------- -------- -------
1 Job1 BackgroundJob Complete True localhost Get-Process
2 Job2 BackgroundJob Running True localhost Get-EventLog -Log ...
3 Job3 BackgroundJob Complete True localhost dir -Path C:\* -Re...
In this case, the State property reveals that Job 2 is still running. If
you were to use the Receive-Job
cmdlet to get the job results now, the
results would be incomplete. You can use the Receive-Job
cmdlet repeatedly to
get all of the results. Use the State property to determine when the job is
complete.
You can also use the Wait parameter of the Receive-Job
cmdlet. When use
use this parameter, the cmdlet doesn't return the command prompt until the job
is completed and all results are available.
You can also use the Wait-Job
cmdlet to wait for any or all of the results of
the job. Wait-Job
lets you wait for one or more specific job or for all jobs.
The following command uses the Wait-Job
cmdlet to wait for a job with ID
10.
Wait-Job -ID 10
As a result, the PowerShell prompt is suppressed until the job is completed.
You can also wait for a predetermined period of time. This command uses the Timeout parameter to limit the wait to 120 seconds. When the time expires, the command prompt returns, but the job continues to run in the background.
Wait-Job -ID 10 -Timeout 120
Stopping a job
To stop a background job, use the Stop-Job
cmdlet. The following command
starts a job to get every entry in the System event log. It saves the job
object in the $job
variable.
$job = Start-Job -ScriptBlock {Get-EventLog -Log System}
The following command stops the job. It uses a pipeline operator (|
) to send
the job in the $job
variable to Stop-Job
.
$job | Stop-Job
Deleting a job
To delete a background job, use the Remove-Job
cmdlet. The following command
deletes the job in the $job
variable.
Remove-Job -Job $job
Investigating a failed job
Jobs can fail for many reasons. the job object contains a Reason property that contains information about the cause of the failure.
The following example starts a job without the required credentials.
$job = Start-Job -ScriptBlock {New-Item -Path HKLM:\Software\MyCompany}
Get-Job $job
Id Name PSJobTypeName State HasMoreData Location Command
-- ---- ------------- ----- ----------- -------- -------
1 Job1 BackgroundJob Failed False localhost New-Item -Path HKLM:...
Inspect the Reason property to find the error that caused the job to fail.
$job.ChildJobs[0].JobStateInfo.Reason
In this case, the job failed because the remote computer required explicit credentials to run the command. The Reason property contains the following message:
Connecting to remote server failed with the following error message: "Access is denied".
See also
PowerShell