Apologize for the noob question but I did hours of research but still so confused...
The problem:
In powershell we can write this:
$i = 'hello'
echo $i # hello
easy. But:
powershell -c "$j = 'hello'; echo $j"
won't work and it throws error at our face.
The question: what is the error, and what is the correct grammar to use powershell -NoP -NonI -c "//..."
? I see quite a few scripts written in this format. I even wonder if it is a linux thing...? but we are talking about powershell right?...
Any help would be appreciated.
It depends on where are you executing the command.
Inside cmd.exe
this will work, because the commands don't render special meaning to cmd. But in powershell it will fail because of the special characters, use powershell -c '$j = ''hello''; echo $j'
powershell -c '$j = ''hello''; echo $j'
instead.
Also -c
, -NoP
etc. are parameters of powershell.exe
:
PowerShell[.exe] [-PSConsoleFile <file> | -Version <version>]
[-NoLogo] [-NoExit] [-Sta] [-Mta] [-NoProfile] [-NonInteractive]
[-InputFormat {Text | XML}] [-OutputFormat {Text | XML}]
[-WindowStyle <style>] [-EncodedCommand <Base64EncodedCommand>]
[-ConfigurationName <string>]
[-File <filePath> <args>] [-ExecutionPolicy <ExecutionPolicy>]
[-Command { - | <script-block> [-args <arg-array>]
| <string> [<CommandParameters>] } ]
PowerShell[.exe] -Help | -? | /?
-PSConsoleFile
Loads the specified Windows PowerShell console file. To create a console
file, use Export-Console in Windows PowerShell.
-Version
Starts the specified version of Windows PowerShell.
Enter a version number with the parameter, such as "-version 2.0".
-NoLogo
Hides the copyright banner at startup.
-NoExit
Does not exit after running startup commands.
-Sta
Starts the shell using a single-threaded apartment.
Single-threaded apartment (STA) is the default.
-Mta
Start the shell using a multithreaded apartment.
-NoProfile
Does not load the Windows PowerShell profile.
-NonInteractive
Does not present an interactive prompt to the user.
-InputFormat
Describes the format of data sent to Windows PowerShell. Valid values are
"Text" (text strings) or "XML" (serialized CLIXML format).
-OutputFormat
Determines how output from Windows PowerShell is formatted. Valid values
are "Text" (text strings) or "XML" (serialized CLIXML format).
-WindowStyle
Sets the window style to Normal, Minimized, Maximized or Hidden.
-EncodedCommand
Accepts a base-64-encoded string version of a command. Use this parameter
to submit commands to Windows PowerShell that require complex quotation
marks or curly braces.
-ConfigurationName
Specifies a configuration endpoint in which Windows PowerShell is run.
This can be any endpoint registered on the local machine including the
default Windows PowerShell remoting endpoints or a custom endpoint having
specific user role capabilities.
-File
Runs the specified script in the local scope ("dot-sourced"), so that the
functions and variables that the script creates are available in the
current session. Enter the script file path and any parameters.
File must be the last parameter in the command, because all characters
typed after the File parameter name are interpreted
as the script file path followed by the script parameters.
-ExecutionPolicy
Sets the default execution policy for the current session and saves it
in the $env:PSExecutionPolicyPreference environment variable.
This parameter does not change the Windows PowerShell execution policy
that is set in the registry.
-Command
Executes the specified commands (and any parameters) as though they were
typed at the Windows PowerShell command prompt, and then exits, unless
NoExit is specified. The value of Command can be "-", a string. or a
script block.
If the value of Command is "-", the command text is read from standard
input.
If the value of Command is a script block, the script block must be enclosed
in braces ({}). You can specify a script block only when running PowerShell.exe
in Windows PowerShell. The results of the script block are returned to the
parent shell as deserialized XML objects, not live objects.
If the value of Command is a string, Command must be the last parameter
in the command , because any characters typed after the command are
interpreted as the command arguments.
To write a string that runs a Windows PowerShell command, use the format:
"& {<command>}"
where the quotation marks indicate a string and the invoke operator (&)
causes the command to be executed.
-Help, -?, /?
Shows this message. If you are typing a PowerShell.exe command in Windows
PowerShell, prepend the command parameters with a hyphen (-), not a forward
slash (/). You can use either a hyphen or forward slash in Cmd.exe.
EXAMPLES
PowerShell -PSConsoleFile SqlSnapIn.Psc1
PowerShell -version 2.0 -NoLogo -InputFormat text -OutputFormat XML
PowerShell -ConfigurationName AdminRoles
PowerShell -Command {Get-EventLog -LogName security}
PowerShell -Command "& {Get-EventLog -LogName security}"
# To use the -EncodedCommand parameter:
$command = 'dir "c:\program files" '
$bytes = [System.Text.Encoding]::Unicode.GetBytes($command)
$encodedCommand = [Convert]::ToBase64String($bytes)
powershell.exe -encodedCommand $encodedCommand
-NoP
is no profile means not load powershell profile. -NonI
is to run non-interactive session. -c
execute command/scriptblock and exit.
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