Runspace01 (C#) Code Sample
Here are the code samples for the runspace described in
Creating a Console Application That Runs a Specified Command.
To do this, the application invokes a runspace, and then invokes a command. (Note that this
application does not specify runspace configuration information, nor does it explicitly create a
pipeline). The command that is invoked is the Get-Process
cmdlet.
Note
You can download the C# source file (runspace01.cs) for this runspace using the Microsoft Windows Software Development Kit for Windows Vista and Microsoft .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.
Code Sample
namespace Microsoft.Samples.PowerShell.Runspaces
{
using System;
using System.Management.Automation;
using PowerShell = System.Management.Automation.PowerShell;
/// <summary>
/// This class contains the Main entry point for this host application.
/// </summary>
internal class Runspace01
{
/// <summary>
/// This sample uses the PowerShell class to execute
/// the get-process cmdlet synchronously. The name and
/// handlecount are then extracted from the PSObjects
/// returned and displayed.
/// </summary>
/// <param name="args">Parameter not used.</param>
/// <remarks>
/// This sample demonstrates the following:
/// 1. Creating a PowerShell object to run a command.
/// 2. Adding a command to the pipeline of the PowerShell object.
/// 3. Running the command synchronously.
/// 4. Using PSObject objects to extract properties from the objects
/// returned by the command.
/// </remarks>
private static void Main(string[] args)
{
// Create a PowerShell object. Creating this object takes care of
// building all of the other data structures needed to run the command.
using (PowerShell powershell = PowerShell.Create().AddCommand("get-process"))
{
Console.WriteLine("Process HandleCount");
Console.WriteLine("--------------------------------");
// Invoke the command synchronously and display the
// ProcessName and HandleCount properties of the
// objects that are returned.
foreach (PSObject result in powershell.Invoke())
{
Console.WriteLine(
"{0,-20} {1}",
result.Members["ProcessName"].Value,
result.Members["HandleCount"].Value);
}
}
System.Console.WriteLine("Hit any key to exit...");
System.Console.ReadKey();
}
}
}