Windows PowerShell Session State
Session state refers to the current configuration of a Windows PowerShell session or module. A Windows PowerShell session is the operational environment that is used interactively by the command-line user or programmatically by a host application. The session state for a session is referred to as the global session state.
From a developer perspective, a Windows PowerShell session refers to the time between when a host application opens a Windows PowerShell runspace and when it closes the runspace. Looked at another way, the session is the lifetime of an instance of the Windows PowerShell engine that is invoked while the runspace exists.
Module Session State
Module session states are created whenever the module or one of its nested modules is imported into the session. When a module exports an element such as a cmdlet, function, or script, a reference to that element is added to the global session state of the session. However, when the element is run, it is executed within the session state of the module.
Session-State Data
Session state data can be public or private. Public data is available to calls from outside the session state while private data is available only to calls from within the session state. For example, a module can have a private function that can be called only by the module or only internally by a public element that has been exported. This is similar to the private and public members of a .NET Framework type.
Session-state data is stored by the current instance of the execution engine within the context of the current Windows PowerShell session. Session-state data consists of the following items:
Path information
Drive information
Windows PowerShell provider information
Information about the imported modules and references to the module elements (such as cmdlets, functions, and scripts) that are exported by the module. This information and these references are for the global session state only.
Session-state variable information
Accessing Session-State Data Within Cmdlets
Cmdlets can access session-state data either indirectly through the System.Management.Automation.PSCmdlet.Sessionstate* property of the cmdlet class or directly through the System.Management.Automation.Sessionstate class. The System.Management.Automation.Sessionstate class provides properties that can be used to investigate different types of session-state data.
See Also
System.Management.Automation.PSCmdlet.Sessionstate
System.Management.Automation.Sessionstate?Displayproperty=Fullname