Get-Command
Gets all commands.
Syntax
Get-Command
[-Verb <String[]>]
[-Noun <String[]>]
[-Module <String[]>]
[-FullyQualifiedModule <ModuleSpecification[]>]
[-TotalCount <Int32>]
[-Syntax]
[-ShowCommandInfo]
[[-ArgumentList] <Object[]>]
[-All]
[-ListImported]
[-ParameterName <String[]>]
[-ParameterType <PSTypeName[]>]
[<CommonParameters>]
Get-Command
[[-Name] <String[]>]
[-Module <String[]>]
[-FullyQualifiedModule <ModuleSpecification[]>]
[-CommandType <CommandTypes>]
[-TotalCount <Int32>]
[-Syntax]
[-ShowCommandInfo]
[[-ArgumentList] <Object[]>]
[-All]
[-ListImported]
[-ParameterName <String[]>]
[-ParameterType <PSTypeName[]>]
[<CommonParameters>]
Description
The Get-Command
cmdlet gets all commands that are installed on the computer, including cmdlets,
aliases, functions, filters, scripts, and applications. Get-Command
gets the commands from
PowerShell modules and commands that were imported from other sessions. To get only commands that
have been imported into the current session, use the ListImported parameter.
Without parameters, Get-Command
gets all the cmdlets, functions, and aliases installed on the
computer. Get-Command *
gets all types of commands, including all the non-PowerShell files in the
Path environment variable ($env:PATH
), which it lists in the Application command type.
Get-Command
that uses the exact name of the command, without wildcard characters, automatically
imports the module that contains the command so that you can use the command immediately. To enable,
disable, and configure automatic importing of modules, use the $PSModuleAutoLoadingPreference
preference variable. For more information, see
about_Preference_Variables.
Get-Command
gets its data directly from the command code, unlike Get-Help
, which gets its
information from help topics.
Starting in Windows PowerShell 5.0, results of the Get-Command
cmdlet display a Version column
by default. A new Version property has been added to the CommandInfo class.
Examples
Example 1: Get cmdlets, functions, and aliases
This command gets the PowerShell cmdlets, functions, and aliases that are installed on the computer.
Get-Command
Example 2: Get commands in the current session
This command uses the ListImported parameter to get only the commands in the current session.
Get-Command -ListImported
Example 3: Get cmdlets and display them in order
This command gets all the cmdlets, sorts them alphabetically by the noun in the cmdlet name, and then displays them in noun-based groups. This display can help you find the cmdlets for a task.
Get-Command -Type Cmdlet | Sort-Object -Property Noun | Format-Table -GroupBy Noun
Example 4: Get commands in a module
This command uses the Module parameter to get the commands in the Microsoft.PowerShell.Security and Microsoft.PowerShell.Utility modules.
Get-Command -Module Microsoft.PowerShell.Security, Microsoft.PowerShell.Utility
Example 5: Get information about a cmdlet
This command gets information about the Get-AppLockerPolicy
cmdlet. It also imports the
AppLocker module, which adds all the commands in the AppLocker module to the current
session.
Get-Command Get-AppLockerPolicy
When a module is imported automatically, the effect is the same as using the Import-Module cmdlet.
The module can add commands, types and formatting files, and run scripts in the session. To enable,
disable, and configuration automatic importing of modules, use the $PSModuleAutoLoadingPreference
preference variable. For more information, see
about_Preference_Variables.
Example 6: Get the syntax of a cmdlet
This command uses the ArgumentList and Syntax parameters to get the syntax of the
Get-ChildItem
cmdlet when it's used in the Cert: drive. The Cert: drive is a PowerShell drive that
the Certificate Provider adds to the session.
Get-Command -Name Get-Childitem -Args Cert: -Syntax
When you compare the syntax displayed in the output with the syntax that's displayed when you omit
the Args (ArgumentList) parameter, you'll see that the Certificate provider adds a
dynamic parameter, CodeSigningCert, to the Get-ChildItem
cmdlet.
For more information about the Certificate provider, see about_Certificate_Provider.
Example 7: Get dynamic parameters
The command in the example uses the Get-DynamicParameters
function to get the dynamic parameters
that the Certificate provider adds to the Get-ChildItem
cmdlet when it's used in the Cert: drive.
function Get-DynamicParameters
{
param ($Cmdlet, $PSDrive)
(Get-Command -Name $Cmdlet -ArgumentList $PSDrive).ParameterSets |
ForEach-Object {$_.Parameters} |
Where-Object { $_.IsDynamic } |
Select-Object -Property Name -Unique
}
Get-DynamicParameters -Cmdlet Get-ChildItem -PSDrive Cert:
Name
----
CodeSigningCert
The Get-DynamicParameters
function in this example gets the dynamic parameters of a cmdlet. This
is an alternative to the method used in the previous example. Dynamic parameter can be added to a
cmdlet by another cmdlet or a provider.
Example 8: Get all commands of all types
This command gets all commands of all types on the local computer, including executable files in the
paths of the Path environment variable ($env:PATH
).
Get-Command *
It returns an ApplicationInfo object (System.Management.Automation.ApplicationInfo) for each file, not a FileInfo object (System.IO.FileInfo).
Example 9: Get cmdlets by using a parameter name and type
This command gets cmdlets that have a parameter whose name includes Auth and whose type is AuthenticationMechanism.
Get-Command -ParameterName *Auth* -ParameterType AuthenticationMechanism
You can use a command like this one to find cmdlets that let you specify the method that's used to authenticate the user.
The ParameterType parameter distinguishes parameters that take an AuthenticationMechanism value from those that take an AuthenticationLevel parameter, even when they have similar names.
Example 10: Get an alias
This example shows how to use the Get-Command
cmdlet with an alias.
Get-Command -Name dir
CommandType Name ModuleName
----------- ---- ----------
Alias dir -> Get-ChildItem
Although it's typically used on cmdlets and functions, Get-Command
also gets scripts, functions,
aliases, and executable files.
The output of the command shows the special view of the Name property value for aliases. The view shows the alias and the full command name.
Example 11: Get all instances of the Notepad command
This example uses the All parameter of the Get-Command
cmdlet to show all instances of the
Notepad
command on the local computer.
Get-Command Notepad -All | Format-Table CommandType, Name, Definition
CommandType Name Definition
----------- ---- ----------
Application notepad.exe C:\WINDOWS\system32\notepad.exe
Application NOTEPAD.EXE C:\WINDOWS\NOTEPAD.EXE
The All parameter is useful when there is more than one command with the same name in the session.
Beginning in Windows PowerShell 3.0, by default, when the session includes multiple commands with
the same name, Get-Command
gets only the command that runs when you type the command name. With
the All parameter, Get-Command
gets all commands with the specified name and returns them in
execution precedence order. To run a command other than the first one in the list, type the fully
qualified path to the command.
For more information about command precedence, see about_Command_Precedence.
Example 12: Get the name of a module that contains a cmdlet
This command gets the name of the module in which the Get-Date
cmdlet originated.
The command uses the ModuleName property of all commands.
(Get-Command Get-Date).ModuleName
Microsoft.PowerShell.Utility
This command format works on commands in PowerShell modules, even if they're not imported into the session.
Example 13: Get cmdlets and functions that have an output type
Get-Command -Type Cmdlet | Where-Object OutputType | Format-List -Property Name, OutputType
This command gets the cmdlets and functions that have an output type and the type of objects that they return.
The first part of the command gets all cmdlets. A pipeline operator (|
) sends the cmdlets to the
Where-Object
cmdlet, which selects only the ones in which the OutputType property is
populated. Another pipeline operator sends the selected cmdlet objects to the Format-List
cmdlet,
which displays the name and output type of each cmdlet in a list.
The OutputType property of a CommandInfo object has a non-null value only when the cmdlet code defines the OutputType attribute for the cmdlet.
Example 14: Get cmdlets that take a specific object type as input
Get-Command -ParameterType (((Get-NetAdapter)[0]).PSTypeNames)
CommandType Name ModuleName
----------- ---- ----------
Function Disable-NetAdapter NetAdapter
Function Enable-NetAdapter NetAdapter
Function Rename-NetAdapter NetAdapter
Function Restart-NetAdapter NetAdapter
Function Set-NetAdapter NetAdapter
This command finds cmdlets that take net adapter objects as input. You can use this command format to find the cmdlets that accept the type of objects that any command returns.
The command uses the PSTypeNames intrinsic property of all objects, which gets the types that describe the object. To get the PSTypeNames property of a net adapter, and not the PSTypeNames property of a collection of net adapters, the command uses array notation to get the first net adapter that the cmdlet returns. To get the PSTypeNames property of a net adapter, and not the PSTypeNames property of a collection of net adapters, the command uses array notation to get the first net adapter that the cmdlet returns.
Parameters
-All
Indicates that this cmdlet gets all commands, including commands of the same type that have the same
name. By default, Get-Command
gets only the commands that run when you type the command name.
For more information about the order that PowerShell searches for commands, see about_Command_Precedence. For information about module-qualified command names and running commands that don't run by default because of a name conflict, see about_Modules.
This parameter was introduced in Windows PowerShell 3.0.
In Windows PowerShell 2.0, Get-Command
gets all commands by default.
Type: | SwitchParameter |
Position: | Named |
Default value: | False |
Required: | False |
Accept pipeline input: | True |
Accept wildcard characters: | False |
-ArgumentList
Specifies an array of arguments. This cmdlet gets information about a cmdlet or function when it's used with the specified parameters ("arguments"). The alias for ArgumentList is Args.
To detect dynamic parameters that are available only when certain other parameters are used, set the value of ArgumentList to the parameters that trigger the dynamic parameters.
To detect the dynamic parameters that a provider adds to a cmdlet, set the value of the
ArgumentList parameter to a path in the provider drive, such as WSMan:
, HKLM:
, or Cert:
.
When the command is a PowerShell provider cmdlet, enter only one path in each command. The provider
cmdlets return only the dynamic parameters for the first path the value of ArgumentList. For
information about the provider cmdlets, see about_Providers.
Type: | Object[] |
Aliases: | Args |
Position: | 1 |
Default value: | None |
Required: | False |
Accept pipeline input: | False |
Accept wildcard characters: | False |
-CommandType
Specifies the types of commands that this cmdlet gets. Enter one or more command types. Use
CommandType or its alias, Type. By default, Get-Command
gets all cmdlets, functions, and
aliases.
The acceptable values for this parameter are:
Alias
: Gets the aliases of all PowerShell commands. For more information, see about_Aliases.All
: Gets all command types. This parameter value is the equivalent ofGet-Command *
.Application
: Searches folders in the$env:PATH
environment variable for non-PowerShell executable files. On Windows, executable files have a file extension that is listed in the$env:PATHEXT
environment variable. For more information, see about_Environment_Variables.Cmdlet
: Gets all cmdlets.ExternalScript
: Gets all.ps1
files in the paths listed in the Path environment variable ($env:PATH
).Filter
andFunction
: Gets all PowerShell advanced and simple functions and filters.Script
: Gets all script blocks. To get PowerShell scripts (.ps1
files), use theExternalScript
value.Workflow
: Gets all workflows. For more information about workflows, see Introducing Windows PowerShell Workflow.
These values are defined as a flag-based enumeration. You can combine multiple values together to set multiple flags using this parameter. The values can be passed to the CommandType parameter as an array of values or as a comma-separated string of those values. The cmdlet will combine the values using a binary-OR operation. Passing values as an array is the simplest option and also allows you to use tab-completion on the values.
Type: | CommandTypes |
Aliases: | Type |
Accepted values: | Alias, Function, Filter, Cmdlet, ExternalScript, Application, Script, Workflow, Configuration, All |
Position: | Named |
Default value: | None |
Required: | False |
Accept pipeline input: | True |
Accept wildcard characters: | False |
-FullyQualifiedModule
The value can be a module name, a full module specification, or a path to a module file.
When the value is a path, the path can be fully qualified or relative. A relative path is resolved relative to the script that contains the using statement.
When the value is a name or module specification, PowerShell searches the PSModulePath for the specified module.
A module specification is a hashtable that has the following keys.
ModuleName
- Required Specifies the module name.GUID
- Optional Specifies the GUID of the module.It's also Required to specify at least one of the three below keys.
ModuleVersion
- Specifies a minimum acceptable version of the module.MaximumVersion
- Specifies the maximum acceptable version of the module.RequiredVersion
- Specifies an exact, required version of the module. This can't be used with the other Version keys.
You can't specify the FullyQualifiedModule parameter in the same command as a Module parameter. The two parameters are mutually exclusive.
Type: | ModuleSpecification[] |
Position: | Named |
Default value: | None |
Required: | False |
Accept pipeline input: | True |
Accept wildcard characters: | False |
-ListImported
Indicates that this cmdlet gets only commands in the current session.
Starting in PowerShell 3.0, by default, Get-Command
gets all installed commands, including, but
not limited to, the commands in the current session. In PowerShell 2.0, it gets only commands in the
current session.
This parameter was introduced in Windows PowerShell 3.0.
Type: | SwitchParameter |
Position: | Named |
Default value: | None |
Required: | False |
Accept pipeline input: | True |
Accept wildcard characters: | False |
-Module
Specifies an array of modules. This cmdlet gets the commands that came from the specified modules or snap-ins. Enter the names of modules or snap-ins.
This parameter takes string values, but the value of this parameter can also be a PSModuleInfo
or PSSnapinInfo object, such as the objects that the Get-Module
, Get-PSSnapin
, and
Import-PSSession
cmdlets return.
You can refer to this parameter by its name, Module, or by its alias, PSSnapin. The parameter name that you choose has no effect on the command output.
Type: | String[] |
Aliases: | PSSnapin |
Position: | Named |
Default value: | None |
Required: | False |
Accept pipeline input: | True |
Accept wildcard characters: | True |
-Name
Specifies an array of names. This cmdlet gets only commands that have the specified name. Enter a name or name pattern. Wildcard characters are permitted.
To get commands that have the same name, use the All parameter. When two commands have the same
name, by default, Get-Command
gets the command that runs when you type the command name.
Type: | String[] |
Position: | 0 |
Default value: | None |
Required: | False |
Accept pipeline input: | True |
Accept wildcard characters: | True |
-Noun
Specifies an array of command nouns. This cmdlet gets commands, which include cmdlets, functions, and aliases, that have names that include the specified noun. Enter one or more nouns or noun patterns. Wildcard characters are permitted.
Type: | String[] |
Position: | Named |
Default value: | None |
Required: | False |
Accept pipeline input: | True |
Accept wildcard characters: | True |
-ParameterName
Specifies an array of parameter names. This cmdlet gets commands in the session that have the specified parameters. Enter parameter names or parameter aliases. Wildcard characters are supported.
The ParameterName and ParameterType parameters search only commands in the current session.
This parameter was introduced in Windows PowerShell 3.0.
Type: | String[] |
Position: | Named |
Default value: | None |
Required: | False |
Accept pipeline input: | False |
Accept wildcard characters: | True |
-ParameterType
Specifies an array of parameter names. This cmdlet gets commands in the session that have parameters of the specified type. Enter the full name or partial name of a parameter type. Wildcard characters are supported.
The ParameterName and ParameterType parameters search only commands in the current session.
This parameter was introduced in Windows PowerShell 3.0.
Type: | PSTypeName[] |
Position: | Named |
Default value: | None |
Required: | False |
Accept pipeline input: | False |
Accept wildcard characters: | True |
-ShowCommandInfo
Indicates that this cmdlet displays command information.
This parameter was introduced in Windows PowerShell 5.0.
Type: | SwitchParameter |
Position: | Named |
Default value: | None |
Required: | False |
Accept pipeline input: | False |
Accept wildcard characters: | False |
-Syntax
Indicates that this cmdlet gets only the following specified data about the command:
- Aliases Gets the standard name.
- Cmdlets. Gets the syntax.
- Functions and filters. Gets the function definition.
- Scripts and applications or files. Gets the path and filename.
Type: | SwitchParameter |
Position: | Named |
Default value: | None |
Required: | False |
Accept pipeline input: | True |
Accept wildcard characters: | False |
-TotalCount
Specifies the number of commands to get. You can use this parameter to limit the output of a command.
Type: | Int32 |
Position: | Named |
Default value: | None |
Required: | False |
Accept pipeline input: | True |
Accept wildcard characters: | False |
-Verb
Specifies an array of command verbs. This cmdlet gets commands, which include cmdlets, functions, and aliases, that have names that include the specified verb. Enter one or more verbs or verb patterns. Wildcard characters are permitted.
Type: | String[] |
Position: | Named |
Default value: | None |
Required: | False |
Accept pipeline input: | True |
Accept wildcard characters: | True |
Inputs
You can pipe command names to this cmdlet.
Outputs
This cmdlet returns objects derived from the CommandInfo class. The type of object that's
returned depends on the type of command that Get-Command
gets.
Represents aliases.
Represents applications and files.
Represents cmdlets.
Represents functions and filters.
Represents workflows.
Notes
Windows PowerShell includes the following aliases for Get-Command
:
gcm
When more than one command that has the same name is available to the session,
Get-Command
returns the command that runs when you type the command name. To get commands that have the same name, listed in run order, use the All parameter. For more information, see about_Command_Precedence.When a module is imported automatically, the effect is the same as using the
Import-Module
cmdlet. The module can add commands, types and formatting files, and run scripts in the session. To enable, disable, and configuration automatic importing of modules, use the$PSModuleAutoLoadingPreference
preference variable. For more information, see about_Preference_Variables.
Related Links
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