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Creating a Windows PowerShell Navigation Provider

This topic describes how to create a Windows PowerShell navigation provider that can navigate the data store. This type of provider supports recursive commands, nested containers, and relative paths.

Note

You can download the C# source file (AccessDBSampleProvider05.cs) for this provider using the Microsoft Windows Software Development Kit for Windows Vista and .NET Framework 3.0 Runtime Components. For download instructions, see How to Install Windows PowerShell and Download the Windows PowerShell SDK. The downloaded source files are available in the <PowerShell Samples> directory. For more information about other Windows PowerShell provider implementations, see Designing Your Windows PowerShell Provider.

The provider described here enables the user handle an Access database as a drive so that the user can navigate to the data tables in the database. When creating your own navigation provider, you can implement methods that can make drive-qualified paths required for navigation, normalize relative paths, move items of the data store, as well as methods that get child names, get the parent path of an item, and test to identify if an item is a container.

Caution

Be aware that this design assumes a database that has a field with the name ID, and that the type of the field is LongInteger.

Define the Windows PowerShell provider

A Windows PowerShell navigation provider must create a .NET class that derives from the System.Management.Automation.Provider.Navigationcmdletprovider base class. Here is the class definition for the navigation provider described in this section.

[CmdletProvider("AccessDB", ProviderCapabilities.None)]
public class AccessDBProvider : NavigationCmdletProvider

Note that in this provider, the System.Management.Automation.Provider.Cmdletproviderattribute attribute includes two parameters. The first parameter specifies a user-friendly name for the provider that is used by Windows PowerShell. The second parameter specifies the Windows PowerShell specific capabilities that the provider exposes to the Windows PowerShell runtime during command processing. For this provider, there are no Windows PowerShell specific capabilities that are added.

Defining Base Functionality

As described in Design Your PS Provider, the System.Management.Automation.Provider.Navigationcmdletprovider base class derives from several other classes that provided different provider functionality. A Windows PowerShell navigation provider, therefore, must define all of the functionality provided by those classes.

To implement functionality for adding session-specific initialization information and for releasing resources that are used by the provider, see Creating a Basic PS Provider. However, most providers (including the provider described here) can use the default implementation of this functionality provided by Windows PowerShell.

To get access to the data store through a Windows PowerShell drive, you must implement the methods of the System.Management.Automation.Provider.Drivecmdletprovider base class. For more information about implementing these methods, see Creating a Windows PowerShell Drive Provider.

To manipulate the items of a data store, such as getting, setting, and clearing items, the provider must implement the methods provided by the System.Management.Automation.Provider.Itemcmdletprovider base class. For more information about implementing these methods, see Creating a Windows PowerShell Item Provider.

To get to the child items, or their names, of the data store, as well as methods that create, copy, rename, and remove items, you must implement the methods provided by the System.Management.Automation.Provider.Containercmdletprovider base class. For more information about implementing these methods, see Creating a Windows PowerShell Container Provider.

Creating a Windows PowerShell Path

Windows PowerShell navigation provider use a provider-internal Windows PowerShell path to navigate the items of the data store. To create a provider-internal path the provider must implement the System.Management.Automation.Provider.Navigationcmdletprovider.Makepath* method to supports calls from the Combine-Path cmdlet. This method combines a parent and child path into a provider-internal path, using a provider-specific path separator between the parent and child paths.

The default implementation takes paths with "/" or "\" as the path separator, normalizes the path separator to "\", combines the parent and child path parts with the separator between them, and then returns a string that contains the combined paths.

This navigation provider does not implement this method. However, the following code is the default implementation of the System.Management.Automation.Provider.Navigationcmdletprovider.Makepath* method.

Things to Remember About Implementing MakePath

The following conditions may apply to your implementation of System.Management.Automation.Provider.Navigationcmdletprovider.Makepath*:

Retrieving the Parent Path

Windows PowerShell navigation providers implement the System.Management.Automation.Provider.Navigationcmdletprovider.Getparentpath* method to retrieve the parent part of the indicated full or partial provider-specific path. The method removes the child part of the path and returns the parent path part. The root parameter specifies the fully-qualified path to the root of a drive. This parameter can be null or empty if a mounted drive is not in use for the retrieval operation. If a root is specified, the method must return a path to a container in the same tree as the root.

The sample navigation provider does not override this method, but uses the default implementation. It accepts paths that use both "/" and "\" as path separators. It first normalizes the path to have only "\" separators, then splits the parent path off at the last "\" and returns the parent path.

To Remember About Implementing GetParentPath

Your implementation of the System.Management.Automation.Provider.Navigationcmdletprovider.Getparentpath* method should split the path lexically on the path separator for the provider namespace. For example, the filesystem provider uses this method to look for the last "\" and returns everything to the left of the separator.

Retrieve the Child Path Name

Your navigation provider implements the System.Management.Automation.Provider.Navigationcmdletprovider.Getchildname* method to retrieve the name (leaf element) of the child of the item located at the indicated full or partial provider-specific path.

The sample navigation provider does not override this method. The default implementation is shown below. It accepts paths that use both "/" and "\" as path separators. It first normalizes the path to have only "\" separators, then splits the parent path off at the last "\" and returns the name of the child path part.

Things to Remember About Implementing GetChildName

Your implementation of the System.Management.Automation.Provider.Navigationcmdletprovider.Getchildname* method should split the path lexically on the path separator. If the supplied path contains no path separators, the method should return the path unmodified.

Important

The path provided in the call to this method might contain characters that are illegal in the provider namespace. These characters are most likely used for wildcard expansion or regular expression matching, and the implementation of this method should not remove them.

Determining if an Item is a Container

The navigation provider can implement the System.Management.Automation.Provider.Navigationcmdletprovider.Isitemcontainer* method to determine if the specified path indicates a container. It returns true if the path represents a container, and false otherwise. The user needs this method to be able to use the Test-Path cmdlet for the supplied path.

The following code shows the System.Management.Automation.Provider.Navigationcmdletprovider.Isitemcontainer* implementation in our sample navigation provider. The method verifies that the specified path is correct and if the table exists, and returns true if the path indicates a container.

protected override bool IsItemContainer(string path)
{
   if (PathIsDrive(path)) 
   { 
       return true; 
   }
   
   string[] pathChunks = ChunkPath(path);
   string tableName;
   int rowNumber;

   PathType type = GetNamesFromPath(path, out tableName, out rowNumber);
   
   if (type == PathType.Table)
   {
      foreach (DatabaseTableInfo ti in GetTables())
      {
          if (string.Equals(ti.Name, tableName, StringComparison.OrdinalIgnoreCase))
          {
              return true;
          }
      } // foreach (DatabaseTableInfo...
   } // if (pathChunks...

   return false;
} // IsItemContainer

Things to Remember About Implementing IsItemContainer

Your navigation provider .NET class might declare provider capabilities of ExpandWildcards, Filter, Include, or Exclude, from the System.Management.Automation.Provider.Providercapabilities enumeration. In this case, the implementation of System.Management.Automation.Provider.Navigationcmdletprovider.Isitemcontainer* needs to ensure that the path passed meets requirements. To do this, the method should access the appropriate property, for example, the System.Management.Automation.Provider.Cmdletprovider.Exclude* property.

Moving an Item

In support of the Move-Item cmdlet, your navigation provider implements the System.Management.Automation.Provider.Navigationcmdletprovider.Moveitem* method. This method moves the item specified by the path parameter to the container at the path supplied in the destination parameter.

The sample navigation provider does not override the System.Management.Automation.Provider.Navigationcmdletprovider.Moveitem* method. The following is the default implementation.

Things to Remember About Implementing MoveItem

Your navigation provider .NET class might declare provider capabilities of ExpandWildcards, Filter, Include, or Exclude, from the System.Management.Automation.Provider.Providercapabilities enumeration. In this case, the implementation of System.Management.Automation.Provider.Navigationcmdletprovider.Moveitem* must ensure that the path passed meets requirements. To do this, the method should access the appropriate property, for example, the CmdletProvider.Exclude property.

By default, overrides of this method should not move objects over existing objects unless the System.Management.Automation.Provider.Cmdletprovider.Force* property is set to true. For example, the filesystem provider will not copy c:\temp\abc.txt over an existing c:\bar.txt file unless the System.Management.Automation.Provider.Cmdletprovider.Force* property is set to true. If the path specified in the destination parameter exists and is a container, the System.Management.Automation.Provider.Cmdletprovider.Force* property is not required. In this case, System.Management.Automation.Provider.Navigationcmdletprovider.Moveitem* should move the item indicated by the path parameter to the container indicated by the destination parameter as a child.

Your implementation of the System.Management.Automation.Provider.Navigationcmdletprovider.Moveitem* method should call System.Management.Automation.Provider.Cmdletprovider.ShouldProcess and check its return value before making any changes to the data store. This method is used to confirm execution of an operation when a change is made to system state, for example, deleting files. System.Management.Automation.Provider.Cmdletprovider.ShouldProcess sends the name of the resource to be changed to the user, with the Windows PowerShell runtime taking into account any command line settings or preference variables in determining what should be displayed to the user.

After the call to System.Management.Automation.Provider.Cmdletprovider.ShouldProcess returns true, the System.Management.Automation.Provider.Navigationcmdletprovider.Moveitem* method should call the System.Management.Automation.Provider.Cmdletprovider.ShouldContinue method. This method sends a message to the user to allow feedback to say if the operation should be continued. Your provider should call System.Management.Automation.Provider.Cmdletprovider.ShouldContinue as an additional check for potentially dangerous system modifications.

Attaching Dynamic Parameters to the Move-Item Cmdlet

Sometimes the Move-Item cmdlet requires additional parameters that are provided dynamically at runtime. To provide these dynamic parameters, the navigation provider must implement the System.Management.Automation.Provider.Navigationcmdletprovider.Moveitemdynamicparameters* method to get the required parameter values from the item at the indicated path, and return an object that has properties and fields with parsing attributes similar to a cmdlet class or a System.Management.Automation.Runtimedefinedparameterdictionary object.

This navigation provider does not implement this method. However, the following code is the default implementation of System.Management.Automation.Provider.Navigationcmdletprovider.Moveitemdynamicparameters*.

Normalizing a Relative Path

Your navigation provider implements the System.Management.Automation.Provider.Navigationcmdletprovider.Normalizerelativepath* method to normalize the fully-qualified path indicated in the path parameter as being relative to the path specified by the basePath parameter. The method returns a string representation of the normalized path. It writes an error if the path parameter specifies a nonexistent path.

The sample navigation provider does not override this method. The following is the default implementation.

Things to Remember About Implementing NormalizeRelativePath

Your implementation of System.Management.Automation.Provider.Navigationcmdletprovider.Normalizerelativepath* should parse the path parameter, but it does not have to use purely syntactical parsing. You are encouraged to design this method to use the path to look up the path information in the data store and create a path that matches the casing and standardized path syntax.

Code Sample

For complete sample code, see AccessDbProviderSample05 Code Sample.

Defining Object Types and Formatting

It is possible for a provider to add members to existing objects or define new objects. For more information, seeExtending Object Types and Formatting.

Building the Windows PowerShell provider

For more information, see How to Register Cmdlets, Providers, and Host Applications.

Testing the Windows PowerShell provider

When your Windows PowerShell provider has been registered with Windows PowerShell, you can test it by running the supported cmdlets on the command line, including cmdlets made available by derivation. This example will test the sample navigation provider.

  1. Run your new shell and use the Set-Location cmdlet to set the path to indicate the Access database.

    Set-Location mydb:
    
  2. Now run the Get-Childitem cmdlet to retrieve a list of the database items, which are the available database tables. For each table, this cmdlet also retrieves the number of table rows.

    Get-ChildItem | Format-Table rowcount,name -AutoSize
    
    RowCount   Name
    --------   ----
         180   MSysAccessObjects
           0   MSysACEs
           1   MSysCmdbars
           0   MSysIMEXColumns
           0   MSysIMEXSpecs
           0   MSysObjects
           0   MSysQueries
           7   MSysRelationships
           8   Categories
          91   Customers
           9   Employees
        2155   Order Details
         830   Orders
          77   Products
           3   Shippers
          29   Suppliers
    
  3. Use the Set-Location cmdlet again to set the location of the Employees data table.

    Set-Location Employees
    
  4. Let's now use the Get-Location cmdlet to retrieve the path to the Employees table.

    Get-Location
    
    Path
    ----
    mydb:\Employees
    
  5. Now use the Get-Childitem cmdlet piped to the Format-Table cmdlet. This set of cmdlets retrieves the items for the Employees data table, which are the table rows. They are formatted as specified by the Format-Table cmdlet.

    Get-ChildItem | Format-Table rownumber,psiscontainer,data -AutoSize
    
    RowNumber   PSIsContainer   Data
    ---------   --------------   ----
    0           False            System.Data.DataRow
    1           False            System.Data.DataRow
    2           False            System.Data.DataRow
    3           False            System.Data.DataRow
    4           False            System.Data.DataRow
    5           False            System.Data.DataRow
    6           False            System.Data.DataRow
    7           False            System.Data.DataRow
    8           False            System.Data.DataRow
    
  6. You can now run the Get-Item cmdlet to retrieve the items for row 0 of the Employees data table.

    Get-Item 0
    
    PSPath        : AccessDB::C:\PS\Northwind.mdb\Employees\0
    PSParentPath  : AccessDB::C:\PS\Northwind.mdb\Employees
    PSChildName   : 0
    PSDrive       : mydb
    PSProvider    : System.Management.Automation.ProviderInfo
    PSIsContainer : False
    Data           : System.Data.DataRow
    RowNumber      : 0
    
  7. Use the Get-Item cmdlet again to retrieve the employee data for the items in row 0.

    (Get-Item 0).data
    
    EmployeeID      : 1
    LastName        : Davis
    FirstName       : Sara
    Title           : Sales Representative
    TitleOfCourtesy : Ms.
    BirthDate       : 12/8/1968 12:00:00 AM
    HireDate        : 5/1/1992 12:00:00 AM
    Address         : 4567 Main Street
                      Apt. 2A
    City            : Buffalo
    Region          : NY
    PostalCode      : 98052
    Country         : USA
    HomePhone       : (206) 555-9857
    Extension       : 5467
    Photo           : EmpID1.bmp
    Notes           : Education includes a BA in psychology from
                      Colorado State University. She also completed "The
                      Art of the Cold Call."  Nancy is a member of
                      Toastmasters International.
    ReportsTo       : 2
    

See Also

Creating Windows PowerShell providers

Design Your Windows PowerShell provider

Extending Object Types and Formatting

Implement a Container Windows PowerShell provider

How to Register Cmdlets, Providers, and Host Applications

Windows PowerShell Programmer's Guide

Windows PowerShell SDK