Creating a Cmdlet without Parameters
This section describes how to create a cmdlet that retrieves information from the local computer without the use of parameters, and then writes the information to the pipeline. The cmdlet described here is a Get-Proc cmdlet that retrieves information about the processes of the local computer, and then displays that information at the command line.
Note
Be aware that when writing cmdlets, the Windows PowerShell® reference assemblies are downloaded onto disk (by default at C:\Program Files\Reference Assemblies\Microsoft\WindowsPowerShell\v1.0). They are not installed in the Global Assembly Cache (GAC).
Naming the Cmdlet
A cmdlet name consists of a verb that indicates the action the cmdlet takes and a noun that indicates the items that the cmdlet acts upon. Because this sample Get-Proc cmdlet retrieves process objects, it uses the verb "Get", defined by the System.Management.Automation.Verbscommon enumeration, and the noun "Proc" to indicate that the cmdlet works on process items.
When naming cmdlets, do not use any of the following characters: # , () {} [] & - /\ $ ; : " '<> | ? @ ` .
Choosing a Noun
You should choose a noun that is specific. It is best to use a singular noun prefixed with a shortened version of the product name. An example cmdlet name of this type is "Get-SQLServer
".
Choosing a Verb
You should use a verb from the set of approved cmdlet verb names. For more information about the approved cmdlet verbs, see Cmdlet Verb Names.
Defining the Cmdlet Class
Once you have chosen a cmdlet name, define a .NET class to implement the cmdlet. Here is the class definition for this sample Get-Proc cmdlet:
[Cmdlet(VerbsCommon.Get, "Proc")]
public class GetProcCommand : Cmdlet
<Cmdlet(VerbsCommon.Get, "Proc")> _
Public Class GetProcCommand
Inherits Cmdlet
Notice that previous to the class definition, the System.Management.Automation.CmdletAttribute attribute, with the syntax [Cmdlet(verb, noun, ...)]
, is used to identify this class as a cmdlet. This is the only required attribute for all cmdlets, and it allows the Windows PowerShell runtime to call them correctly. You can set attribute keywords to further declare the class if necessary. Be aware that the attribute declaration for our sample GetProcCommand class declares only the noun and verb names for the Get-Proc cmdlet.
Note
For all Windows PowerShell attribute classes, the keywords that you can set correspond to properties of the attribute class.
When naming the class of the cmdlet, it is a good practice to reflect the cmdlet name in the class name. To do this, use the form "VerbNounCommand" and replace "Verb" and "Noun" with the verb and noun used in the cmdlet name. As is shown in the previous class definition, the sample Get-Proc cmdlet defines a class called GetProcCommand, which derives from the System.Management.Automation.Cmdlet base class.
Important
If you want to define a cmdlet that accesses the Windows PowerShell runtime directly, your .NET class should derive from the System.Management.Automation.PSCmdlet base class. For more information about this class, see Creating a Cmdlet that Defines Parameter Sets.
Note
The class for a cmdlet must be explicitly marked as public. Classes that are not marked as public will default to internal and will not be found by the Windows PowerShell runtime.
Windows PowerShell uses the Microsoft.PowerShell.Commands namespace for its cmdlet classes. It is recommended to place your cmdlet classes in a Commands namespace of your API namespace, for example, xxx.PS.Commands.
Overriding an Input Processing Method
The System.Management.Automation.Cmdlet class provides three main input processing methods, at least one of which your cmdlet must override. For more information about how Windows PowerShell processes records, see How Windows PowerShell Works.
For all types of input, the Windows PowerShell runtime calls System.Management.Automation.Cmdlet.BeginProcessing to enable processing. If your cmdlet must perform some preprocessing or setup, it can do this by overriding this method.
Note
Windows PowerShell uses the term "record" to describe the set of parameter values supplied when a cmdlet is called.
If your cmdlet accepts pipeline input, it must override the System.Management.Automation.Cmdlet.ProcessRecord method, and optionally the System.Management.Automation.Cmdlet.EndProcessing method. For example, a cmdlet might override both methods if it gathers all input using System.Management.Automation.Cmdlet.ProcessRecord and then operates on the input as a whole rather than one element at a time, as the Sort-Object
cmdlet does.
If your cmdlet does not take pipeline input, it should override the System.Management.Automation.Cmdlet.EndProcessing method. Be aware that this method is frequently used in place of System.Management.Automation.Cmdlet.BeginProcessing when the cmdlet cannot operate on one element at a time, as is the case for a sorting cmdlet.
Because this sample Get-Proc cmdlet must receive pipeline input, it overrides the System.Management.Automation.Cmdlet.ProcessRecord method and uses the default implementations for System.Management.Automation.Cmdlet.BeginProcessing and System.Management.Automation.Cmdlet.EndProcessing. The System.Management.Automation.Cmdlet.ProcessRecord override retrieves processes and writes them to the command line using the System.Management.Automation.Cmdlet.WriteObject method.
protected override void ProcessRecord()
{
// Get the current processes
Process[] processes = Process.GetProcesses();
// Write the processes to the pipeline making them available
// to the next cmdlet. The second parameter of this call tells
// PowerShell to enumerate the array, and send one process at a
// time to the pipeline.
WriteObject(processes, true);
}
Protected Overrides Sub ProcessRecord()
'/ Get the current processes.
Dim processes As Process()
processes = Process.GetProcesses()
'/ Write the processes to the pipeline making them available
'/ to the next cmdlet. The second parameter of this call tells
'/ PowerShell to enumerate the array, and send one process at a
'/ time to the pipeline.
WriteObject(processes, True)
End Sub 'ProcessRecord
Things to Remember About Input Processing
The default source for input is an explicit object (for example, a string) provided by the user on the command line. For more information, see Creating a Cmdlet to Process Command Line Input.
An input processing method can also receive input from the output object of an upstream cmdlet on the pipeline. For more information, see Creating a Cmdlet to Process Pipeline Input. Be aware that your cmdlet can receive input from a combination of command-line and pipeline sources.
The downstream cmdlet might not return for a long time, or not at all. For that reason, the input processing method in your cmdlet should not hold locks during calls to System.Management.Automation.Cmdlet.WriteObject, especially locks for which the scope extends beyond the cmdlet instance.
Important
Cmdlets should never call System.Console.Writeline* or its equivalent.
- Your cmdlet might have object variables to clean up when it is finished processing (for example, if it opens a file handle in the System.Management.Automation.Cmdlet.BeginProcessing method and keeps the handle open for use by System.Management.Automation.Cmdlet.ProcessRecord). It is important to remember that the Windows PowerShell runtime does not always call the System.Management.Automation.Cmdlet.EndProcessing method, which should perform object cleanup.
For example, System.Management.Automation.Cmdlet.EndProcessing might not be called if the cmdlet is canceled midway or if a terminating error occurs in any part of the cmdlet. Therefore, a cmdlet that requires object cleanup should implement the complete System.IDisposable pattern, including the finalizer, so that the runtime can call both System.Management.Automation.Cmdlet.EndProcessing and System.IDisposable.Dispose* at the end of processing.
Code Sample
For the complete C# sample code, see GetProcessSample01 Sample.
Defining Object Types and Formatting
Windows PowerShell passes information between cmdlets using .NET objects. Consequently, a cmdlet might need to define its own type, or the cmdlet might need to extend an existing type provided by another cmdlet. For more information about defining new types or extending existing types, see Extending Object Types and Formatting.
Building the Cmdlet
After implementing a cmdlet, you must register it with Windows PowerShell through a Windows PowerShell snap-in. For more information about registering cmdlets, see How to Register Cmdlets, Providers, and Host Applications.
Testing the Cmdlet
When your cmdlet has been registered with Windows PowerShell, you can test it by running it on the command line. The code for our sample Get-Proc cmdlet is small, but it still uses the Windows PowerShell runtime and an existing .NET object, which is enough to make it useful. Let's test it to better understand what Get-Proc can do and how its output can be used. For more information about using cmdlets from the command line, see the Getting Started with Windows PowerShell.
Start Windows PowerShell, and get the current processes running on the computer.
get-proc
The following output appears.
Handles NPM(K) PM(K) WS(K) VS(M) CPU(s) Id ProcessName ------- ------ ----- ----- ----- ------ -- ---------- 254 7 7664 12048 66 173.75 1200 QCTRAY 32 2 1372 2628 31 0.04 1860 DLG 271 6 1216 3688 33 0.03 3816 lg 27 2 560 1920 24 0.01 1768 TpScrex ...
Assign a variable to the cmdlet results for easier manipulation.
$p=get-proc
Get the number of processes.
$p.length
The following output appears.
63
Retrieve a specific process.
$p[6]
The following output appears.
Handles NPM(K) PM(K) WS(K) VS(M) CPU(s) Id ProcessName ------- ------ ----- ----- ----- ------ -- ----------- 1033 3 2400 3336 35 0.53 1588 rundll32
Get the start time of this process.
$p[6].starttime
The following output appears.
Tuesday, July 26, 2005 9:34:15 AM
$p[6].starttime.dayofyear
207
Get the processes for which the handle count is greater than 500, and sort the result.
$p | Where-Object {$_.HandleCount -gt 500 } | Sort-Object HandleCount
The following output appears.
Handles NPM(K) PM(K) WS(K) VS(M) CPU(s) Id ProcessName ------- ------ ----- ----- ----- ------ -- ---------- 568 14 2164 4972 39 5.55 824 svchost 716 7 2080 5332 28 25.38 468 csrss 761 21 33060 56608 440 393.56 3300 WINWORD 791 71 7412 4540 59 3.31 492 winlogon ...
Use the
Get-Member
cmdlet to list the properties available for each process.$p | Get-Member -MemberType property
TypeName: System.Diagnostics.Process
The following output appears.
Name MemberType Definition ---- ---------- ---------- BasePriority Property System.Int32 BasePriority {get;} Container Property System.ComponentModel.IContainer Conta... EnableRaisingEvents Property System.Boolean EnableRaisingEvents {ge... ...
See Also
Creating a Cmdlet to Process Command Line Input
Creating a Cmdlet to Process Pipeline Input
How to Create a Windows PowerShell Cmdlet
Extending Object Types and Formatting
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