Adding and invoking commands
After creating a runspace, you can add Windows PowerShell commands and scripts to a pipeline, and then invoke the pipeline synchronously or asynchronously.
Creating a pipeline
The System.Management.Automation.Powershell class provides several methods to add commands, parameters, and scripts to the pipeline. You can invoke the pipeline synchronously by calling an overload of the System.Management.Automation.Powershell.Invoke* method, or asynchronously by calling an overload of the System.Management.Automation.Powershell.Begininvoke* and then the System.Management.Automation.Powershell.Endinvoke* method.
AddCommand
Create a System.Management.Automation.Powershell object.
PowerShell ps = PowerShell.Create();
Add the command that you want to execute.
ps.AddCommand("Get-Process");
Invoke the command.
ps.Invoke();
If you call the System.Management.Automation.Powershell.Addcommand* method more than once before you call the System.Management.Automation.Powershell.Invoke* method, the result of the first command is piped to the second, and so on. If you do not want to pipe the result of a previous command to a command, add it by calling the System.Management.Automation.Powershell.Addstatement* instead.
AddParameter
The previous example executes a single command without any parameters. You can add parameters to
the command by using the
System.Management.Automation.Pscommand.Addparameter*
method For example, the following code gets a list of all of the processes that are named
PowerShell
running on the machine.
PowerShell.Create().AddCommand("Get-Process")
.AddParameter("Name", "PowerShell")
.Invoke();
You can add additional parameters by calling System.Management.Automation.Pscommand.Addparameter* repeatedly.
PowerShell.Create().AddCommand("Get-Command")
.AddParameter("Name", "Get-VM")
.AddParameter("Module", "Hyper-V")
.Invoke();
You can also add a dictionary of parameter names and values by calling the System.Management.Automation.Powershell.Addparameters* method.
IDictionary parameters = new Dictionary<String, String>();
parameters.Add("Name", "Get-VM");
parameters.Add("Module", "Hyper-V");
PowerShell.Create().AddCommand("Get-Command")
.AddParameters(parameters)
.Invoke()
AddStatement
You can simulate batching by using the
System.Management.Automation.Powershell.Addstatement*
method, which adds an additional statement to the end of the pipeline The following code gets a list
of running processes with the name PowerShell
, and then gets the list of running services.
PowerShell ps = PowerShell.Create();
ps.AddCommand("Get-Process").AddParameter("Name", "PowerShell");
ps.AddStatement().AddCommand("Get-Service");
ps.Invoke();
AddScript
You can run an existing script by calling the
System.Management.Automation.Powershell.Addscript*
method. The following example adds a script to the pipeline and runs it. This example assumes there
is already a script named MyScript.ps1
in a folder named D:\PSScripts
.
PowerShell ps = PowerShell.Create();
ps.AddScript(File.ReadAllText(@"D:\PSScripts\MyScript.ps1")).Invoke();
There is also a version of the
System.Management.Automation.Powershell.Addscript*
method that takes a boolean parameter named useLocalScope
. If this parameter is set to true
,
then the script is run in the local scope. The following code will run the script in the local
scope.
PowerShell ps = PowerShell.Create();
ps.AddScript(File.ReadAllText(@"D:\PSScripts\MyScript.ps1"), true).Invoke();
Invoking a pipeline synchronously
After you add elements to the pipeline, you invoke it. To invoke the pipeline synchronously, you call an overload of the System.Management.Automation.Powershell.Invoke* method. The following example shows how to synchronously invoke a pipeline.
using System;
using System.Collections.Generic;
using System.Linq;
using System.Text;
using System.Management.Automation;
namespace HostPS1e
{
class HostPS1e
{
static void Main(string[] args)
{
// Using the PowerShell.Create and AddCommand
// methods, create a command pipeline.
PowerShell ps = PowerShell.Create().AddCommand ("Sort-Object");
// Using the PowerShell.Invoke method, run the command
// pipeline using the supplied input.
foreach (PSObject result in ps.Invoke(new int[] { 3, 1, 6, 2, 5, 4 }))
{
Console.WriteLine("{0}", result);
} // End foreach.
} // End Main.
} // End HostPS1e.
}
Invoking a pipeline asynchronously
You invoke a pipeline asynchronously by calling an overload of the System.Management.Automation.Powershell.Begininvoke* to create an IAsyncResult object, and then calling the System.Management.Automation.Powershell.Endinvoke* method.
The following example shows how to invoke a pipeline asynchronously.
using System;
using System.Collections.Generic;
using System.Linq;
using System.Text;
using System.Management.Automation;
namespace HostPS3
{
class HostPS3
{
static void Main(string[] args)
{
// Use the PowerShell.Create and PowerShell.AddCommand
// methods to create a command pipeline that includes
// Get-Process cmdlet. Do not include spaces immediately
// before or after the cmdlet name as that will cause
// the command to fail.
PowerShell ps = PowerShell.Create().AddCommand("Get-Process");
// Create an IAsyncResult object and call the
// BeginInvoke method to start running the
// command pipeline asynchronously.
IAsyncResult asyncpl = ps.BeginInvoke();
// Using the PowerShell.Invoke method, run the command
// pipeline using the default runspace.
foreach (PSObject result in ps.EndInvoke(asyncpl))
{
Console.WriteLine("{0,-20}{1}",
result.Members["ProcessName"].Value,
result.Members["Id"].Value);
} // End foreach.
System.Console.WriteLine("Hit any key to exit.");
System.Console.ReadKey();
} // End Main.
} // End HostPS3.
}
See Also
PowerShell