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Creating a Cmdlet that Modifies the System

Sometimes a cmdlet must modify the running state of the system, not just the state of the Windows PowerShell runtime. In these cases, the cmdlet should allow the user a chance to confirm whether or not to make the change.

To support confirmation a cmdlet must do two things.

By supporting confirmation, a cmdlet exposes the Confirm and WhatIf parameters that are provided by Windows PowerShell, and also meets the development guidelines for cmdlets (For more information about cmdlet development guidelines, see Cmdlet Development Guidelines.).

Changing the System

The act of "changing the system" refers to any cmdlet that potentially changes the state of the system outside Windows PowerShell. For example, stopping a process, enabling or disabling a user account, or adding a row to a database table are all changes to the system that should be confirmed. In contrast, operations that read data or establish transient connections do not change the system and generally do not require confirmation. Confirmation is also not needed for actions whose effect is limited to inside the Windows PowerShell runtime, such as set-variable. Cmdlets that might or might not make a persistent change should declare SupportsShouldProcess and call System.Management.Automation.Cmdlet.ShouldProcess only if they are about to make a persistent change.

Note

ShouldProcess confirmation applies only to cmdlets. If a command or script modifies the running state of a system by directly calling .NET methods or properties, or by calling applications outside of Windows PowerShell, this form of confirmation will not be available.

The StopProc Cmdlet

This topic describes a Stop-Proc cmdlet that attempts to stop processes that are retrieved using the Get-Proc cmdlet (described in Creating Your First Cmdlet).

Defining the Cmdlet

The first step in cmdlet creation is always naming the cmdlet and declaring the .NET class that implements the cmdlet. Because you are writing a cmdlet to change the system, it should be named accordingly. This cmdlet stops system processes, so the verb name chosen here is "Stop", defined by the System.Management.Automation.Verbslifecycle class, with the noun "Proc" to indicate that the cmdlet stops processes. For more information about approved cmdlet verbs, see Cmdlet Verb Names.

The following is the class definition for this Stop-Proc cmdlet.

[Cmdlet(VerbsLifecycle.Stop, "Proc",
        SupportsShouldProcess = true)]
public class StopProcCommand : Cmdlet

Be aware that in the System.Management.Automation.CmdletAttribute declaration, the SupportsShouldProcess attribute keyword is set to true to enable the cmdlet to make calls to System.Management.Automation.Cmdlet.ShouldProcess and System.Management.Automation.Cmdlet.ShouldContinue. Without this keyword set, the Confirm and WhatIf parameters will not be available to the user.

Extremely Destructive Actions

Some operations are extremely destructive, such as reformatting an active hard disk partition. In these cases, the cmdlet should set ConfirmImpact = ConfirmImpact.High when declaring the System.Management.Automation.CmdletAttribute attribute. This setting forces the cmdlet to request user confirmation even when the user has not specified the Confirm parameter. However, cmdlet developers should avoid overusing ConfirmImpact for operations that are just potentially destructive, such as deleting a user account. Remember that if ConfirmImpact is set to System.Management.Automation.ConfirmImpact High.

Similarly, some operations are unlikely to be destructive, although they do in theory modify the running state of a system outside Windows PowerShell. Such cmdlets can set ConfirmImpact to System.Management.Automation.Confirmimpact.Low. This will bypass confirmation requests where the user has asked to confirm only medium-impact and high-impact operations.

Defining Parameters for System Modification

This section describes how to define the cmdlet parameters, including those that are needed to support system modification. See Adding Parameters that Process CommandLine Input if you need general information about defining parameters.

The Stop-Proc cmdlet defines three parameters: Name, Force, and PassThru.

The Name parameter corresponds to the Name property of the process input object. Be aware that the Name parameter in this sample is mandatory, as the cmdlet will fail if it does not have a named process to stop.

The Force parameter allows the user to override calls to System.Management.Automation.Cmdlet.ShouldContinue. In fact, any cmdlet that calls System.Management.Automation.Cmdlet.ShouldContinue should have a Force parameter so that when Force is specified, the cmdlet skips the call to System.Management.Automation.Cmdlet.ShouldContinue and proceeds with the operation. Be aware that this does not affect calls to System.Management.Automation.Cmdlet.ShouldProcess.

The PassThru parameter allows the user to indicate whether the cmdlet passes an output object through the pipeline, in this case, after a process is stopped. Be aware that this parameter is tied to the cmdlet itself instead of to a property of the input object.

Here is the parameter declaration for the Stop-Proc cmdlet.

[Parameter(
           Position = 0,
           Mandatory = true,
           ValueFromPipeline = true,
           ValueFromPipelineByPropertyName = true
)]
public string[] Name
{
  get { return processNames; }
  set { processNames = value; }
}
private string[] processNames;

/// <summary>
/// Specify the Force parameter that allows the user to override
/// the ShouldContinue call to force the stop operation. This
/// parameter should always be used with caution.
/// </summary>
[Parameter]
public SwitchParameter Force
{
  get { return force; }
  set { force = value; }
}
private bool force;

/// <summary>
/// Specify the PassThru parameter that allows the user to specify
/// that the cmdlet should pass the process object down the pipeline
/// after the process has been stopped.
/// </summary>
[Parameter]
public SwitchParameter PassThru
{
  get { return passThru; }
  set { passThru = value; }
}
private bool passThru;

Overriding an Input Processing Method

The cmdlet must override an input processing method. The following code illustrates the System.Management.Automation.Cmdlet.ProcessRecord override used in the sample Stop-Proc cmdlet. For each requested process name, this method ensures that the process is not a special process, tries to stop the process, and then sends an output object if the PassThru parameter is specified.

protected override void ProcessRecord()
{
  foreach (string name in processNames)
  {
    // For every process name passed to the cmdlet, get the associated
    // process(es). For failures, write a non-terminating error
    Process[] processes;

    try
    {
      processes = Process.GetProcessesByName(name);
    }
    catch (InvalidOperationException ioe)
    {
      WriteError(new ErrorRecord(ioe,"Unable to access the target process by name",
                 ErrorCategory.InvalidOperation, name));
      continue;
    }

    // Try to stop the process(es) that have been retrieved for a name
    foreach (Process process in processes)
    {
      string processName;

      try
      {
        processName = process.ProcessName;
      }

      catch (Win32Exception e)
        {
          WriteError(new ErrorRecord(e, "ProcessNameNotFound",
                     ErrorCategory.ReadError, process));
          continue;
        }

        // Call Should Process to confirm the operation first.
        // This is always false if WhatIf is set.
        if (!ShouldProcess(string.Format("{0} ({1})", processName,
                           process.Id)))
        {
          continue;
        }
        // Call ShouldContinue to make sure the user really does want
        // to stop a critical process that could possibly stop the computer.
        bool criticalProcess =
             criticalProcessNames.Contains(processName.ToLower());

        if (criticalProcess &&!force)
        {
          string message = String.Format
                ("The process \"{0}\" is a critical process and should not be stopped. Are you sure you wish to stop the process?",
                processName);

          // It is possible that ProcessRecord is called multiple times
          // when the Name parameter receives objects as input from the
          // pipeline. So to retain YesToAll and NoToAll input that the
          // user may enter across multiple calls to ProcessRecord, this
          // information is stored as private members of the cmdlet.
          if (!ShouldContinue(message, "Warning!",
                              ref yesToAll,
                              ref noToAll))
          {
            continue;
          }
        } // if (criticalProcess...
        // Stop the named process.
        try
        {
          process.Kill();
        }
        catch (Exception e)
        {
          if ((e is Win32Exception) || (e is SystemException) ||
              (e is InvalidOperationException))
          {
            // This process could not be stopped so write
            // a non-terminating error.
            string message = String.Format("{0} {1} {2}",
                             "Could not stop process \"", processName,
                             "\".");
            WriteError(new ErrorRecord(e, message,
                       ErrorCategory.CloseError, process));
                       continue;
          } // if ((e is...
          else throw;
        } // catch

        // If the PassThru parameter argument is
        // True, pass the terminated process on.
        if (passThru)
        {
          WriteObject(process);
        }
    } // foreach (Process...
  } // foreach (string...
} // ProcessRecord

Calling the ShouldProcess Method

The input processing method of your cmdlet should call the System.Management.Automation.Cmdlet.ShouldProcess method to confirm execution of an operation before a change (for example, deleting files) is made to the running state of the system. This allows the Windows PowerShell runtime to supply the correct "WhatIf" and "Confirm" behavior within the shell.

Note

If a cmdlet states that it supports should process and fails to make the System.Management.Automation.Cmdlet.ShouldProcess call, the user might modify the system unexpectedly.

The call to System.Management.Automation.Cmdlet.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.

The following example shows the call to System.Management.Automation.Cmdlet.ShouldProcess from the override of the System.Management.Automation.Cmdlet.ProcessRecord method in the sample Stop-Proc cmdlet.

if (!ShouldProcess(string.Format("{0} ({1})", processName,
                   process.Id)))
{
  continue;
}

Calling the ShouldContinue Method

The call to the System.Management.Automation.Cmdlet.ShouldContinue method sends a secondary message to the user. This call is made after the call to System.Management.Automation.Cmdlet.ShouldProcess returns true and if the Force parameter was not set to true. The user can then provide feedback to say whether the operation should be continued. Your cmdlet calls System.Management.Automation.Cmdlet.ShouldContinue as an additional check for potentially dangerous system modifications or when you want to provide yes-to-all and no-to-all options to the user.

The following example shows the call to System.Management.Automation.Cmdlet.ShouldContinue from the override of the System.Management.Automation.Cmdlet.ProcessRecord method in the sample Stop-Proc cmdlet.

if (criticalProcess &&!force)
{
  string message = String.Format
        ("The process \"{0}\" is a critical process and should not be stopped. Are you sure you wish to stop the process?",
        processName);

  // It is possible that ProcessRecord is called multiple times
  // when the Name parameter receives objects as input from the
  // pipeline. So to retain YesToAll and NoToAll input that the
  // user may enter across multiple calls to ProcessRecord, this
  // information is stored as private members of the cmdlet.
  if (!ShouldContinue(message, "Warning!",
                      ref yesToAll,
                      ref noToAll))
  {
    continue;
  }
} // if (criticalProcess...

Stopping Input Processing

The input processing method of a cmdlet that makes system modifications must provide a way of stopping the processing of input. In the case of this Stop-Proc cmdlet, a call is made from the System.Management.Automation.Cmdlet.ProcessRecord method to the System.Diagnostics.Process.Kill* method. Because the PassThru parameter is set to true, System.Management.Automation.Cmdlet.ProcessRecord also calls System.Management.Automation.Cmdlet.WriteObject to send the process object to the pipeline.

Code Sample

For the complete C# sample code, see StopProcessSample01 Sample.

Defining Object Types and Formatting

Windows PowerShell passes information between cmdlets using .Net objects. Consequently, a cmdlet may need to define its own type, or the cmdlet may 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, it must be registered 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. Here are several tests that test the Stop-Proc cmdlet. For more information about using cmdlets from the command line, see the Getting Started with Windows PowerShell.

  • Start Windows PowerShell and use the Stop-Proc cmdlet to stop processing as shown below. Because the cmdlet specifies the Name parameter as mandatory, the cmdlet queries for the parameter.

    PS> stop-proc
    

    The following output appears.

    Cmdlet stop-proc at command pipeline position 1
    Supply values for the following parameters:
    Name[0]:
    
  • Now let's use the cmdlet to stop the process named "NOTEPAD". The cmdlet asks you to confirm the action.

    PS> stop-proc -Name notepad
    

    The following output appears.

    Confirm
    Are you sure you want to perform this action?
    Performing operation "stop-proc" on Target "notepad (4996)".
    [Y] Yes  [A] Yes to All  [N] No  [L] No to All  [S] Suspend  [?] Help (default is "Y"): Y
    
  • Use Stop-Proc as shown to stop the critical process named "WINLOGON". You are prompted and warned about performing this action because it will cause the operating system to reboot.

    PS> stop-proc -Name Winlogon
    

    The following output appears.

    Confirm
    Are you sure you want to perform this action?
    Performing operation "stop-proc" on Target "winlogon (656)".
    [Y] Yes  [A] Yes to All  [N] No  [L] No to All  [S] Suspend  [?] Help (default is "Y"): Y
    Warning!
    The process " winlogon " is a critical process and should not be stopped. Are you sure you wish to stop the process?
    [Y] Yes  [A] Yes to All  [N] No  [L] No to All  [S] Suspend  [?] Help (default is "Y"): N
    
  • Let's now try to stop the WINLOGON process without receiving a warning. Be aware that this command entry uses the Force parameter to override the warning.

    PS> stop-proc -Name winlogon -Force
    

    The following output appears.

    Confirm
    Are you sure you want to perform this action?
    Performing operation "stop-proc" on Target "winlogon (656)".
    [Y] Yes  [A] Yes to All  [N] No  [L] No to All  [S] Suspend  [?] Help (default is "Y"): N
    

See Also

Adding Parameters that Process Command-Line Input

Extending Object Types and Formatting

How to Register Cmdlets, Providers, and Host Applications

Windows PowerShell SDK

Cmdlet Samples