SS64.com is a good resource.
The PoshCode unofficial guide is our reference.
- Variables are created in your current scope unless explicitly indicated.
- Variables are visible in a child scope unless explicitly indicated.
- Variables created in a child scope are not visible to a parent unless explicitly indicated.
- Variables may be placed explicitly in a scope.
- functions
- call operator (
& { }) - script invocations
- source operator (
. { }) - statements (
if .. else,for,switch, etc.)
Error handling in PowerShell is a bit weird, as not all errors result in catchable exceptions by default.
Setting $ErrorActionPreference = 'Stop' will likely do what you want;
that is, cause non-terminating errors instead to terminate.
Read An Introduction To Error Handling in PowerShell for more information.
The SDK NuGet package Microsoft.PowerShell.SDK is provided for developers to write .NET Core C# code targeting PowerShell Core.
PowerShell NuGet packages for releases starting from v6.0.0-alpha.9 will be published to the powershell-core myget feed.
To use the Microsoft.PowerShell.SDK NuGet package, declare the frameworks section in your project.json file as follows:
"frameworks": {
"netstandard1.6": {
"imports": [ "dnxcore50", "portable-net45+win8" ],
"dependencies": {
"Microsoft.PowerShell.SDK": "6.0.0-alpha13"
}
}
}There are few common issues with the build.
The easiest way to resolve most issues with the build is to run Start-PSBuild -Clean.
If package dependencies were changed in any project.json, you need to manually
run dotnet restore to update your local dependency graphs.
Start-PSBuild -Restore can automatically do this.
Start-PSBuild automatically calls Start-ResGen on the very first run.
On subsequent runs, you may need to explicitly use Start-PSBuild -ResGen command.
Try it, when you see compilation error about *strings.
More details about resource.
Similar to -ResGen parameter, there is -TypeGen parameter that triggers regeneration of type catalog.
We depend on the latest version of the .NET CLI, as we use the output of dotnet --info to determine the current runtime identifier.
Without this information, our build function can't know where dotnet is going to place the build artifacts.
You can automatically install this using Start-PSBootstrap.
However, you must first manually uninstall other versions of the CLI.
If you have installed by using any of the following means:
MSIexeapt-getpkg
You must manually uninstall it.
Additionally, if you've just unzipped their binary drops (or used their obtain scripts, which do essentially the same thing), you must manually delete the folder, as the .NET CLI team re-engineered how their binaries are setup, such that new packages' binaries get stomped on by old packages' binaries.
If a submodule (such as src/Modules/Pester) is empty, that means it is
uninitialized.
If you've already cloned, you can do this with:
git submodule init
git submodule updateYou can verify that the submodules were initialized properly with:
git submodule statusIf they're initialized, it will look like this:
f23641488f8d7bf8630ca3496e61562aa3a64009 src/Modules/Pester (f23641488)
c99458533a9b4c743ed51537e25989ea55944908 src/libpsl-native/test/googletest (release-1.7.0)
If they're not, there will be minuses in front (and the folders will be empty):
-f23641488f8d7bf8630ca3496e61562aa3a64009 src/Modules/Pester (f23641488)
-c99458533a9b4c743ed51537e25989ea55944908 src/libpsl-native/test/googletest (release-1.7.0)
Please note that the commit hashes for the submodules have likely changed since this FAQ was written.
When a submodule is first initialized and updated, it is not checked out to a branch, but the very exact commit that the super-project (this PowerShell repository) has recorded for the submodule. This behavior is intended.
If you want to check out an actual branch, just do so with git checkout <branch>.
A submodule is just a Git repository; it just happens to be nested inside another repository.
Please read the Git Book chapter on submodules.