This is a distilled version of my actual code — I've made it as small as possible so that you can see the problem I am having clearly:
using System;
using System.Management.Automation;
namespace DemoCmdLet1
{
class Program
{
static void Main(string[] args)
{
var cmd = new GetColorsCommand();
foreach ( var i in cmd.Invoke<string>())
{
Console.WriteLine("- " + i );
}
}
}
[Cmdlet("Get", "Colors")]
public class GetColorsCommand : Cmdlet
{
protected override void ProcessRecord()
{
this.WriteObject("Hello");
this.WriteVerbose("World");
}
}
}
Here is is the source code based on the answer below.
Some things are still not clear to me: * How to call the "Get-Colors" cmdlet (ideally without having to pass it as a string to the ps objet) * How to get the verbose output as it is generated instead of getting an collection of them at the end.
using System;
using System.Management.Automation;
namespace DemoCmdLet1
{
class Program
{
static void Main(string[] args)
{
var ps = System.Management.Automation.PowerShell.Create();
ps.Commands.AddScript("$verbosepreference='continue'; write-verbose 42");
foreach ( var i in ps.Invoke<string>())
{
Console.WriteLine("normal output: {0}" , i );
}
foreach (var i in ps.Streams.Verbose)
{
Console.WriteLine("verbose output: {0}" , i);
}
}
}
[Cmdlet("Get", "Colors")]
public class GetColorsCommand : Cmdlet
{
protected override void ProcessRecord()
{
this.WriteObject("Red");
this.WriteVerbose("r");
this.WriteObject("Green");
this.WriteVerbose("g");
this.WriteObject("Blue");
this.WriteVerbose("b");
}
}
}
The code above generates this output:
d:\DemoCmdLet1\DemoCmdLet1>bin\Debug\DemoCmdLet1.exe
verbose output: 42
by using the Powershell class (found in System.Management.Automation but only in the version of the assembly that comes with the powershell 2.0 SDK, not what comes out-of-the-box on Windows 7) I can programmatically call the cmdlet and get the verbose output. The remaining part is to actually add a custom cmdlet to that powershell instance - because that was my original goal - to unit test my cmdlets not those that come with powershell.
class Program
{
static void Main(string[] args)
{
var ps = System.Management.Automation.PowerShell.Create();
ps.AddCommand("Get-Process");
ps.AddParameter("Verbose");
ps.Streams.Verbose.DataAdded += Verbose_DataAdded;
foreach (PSObject result in ps.Invoke())
{
Console.WriteLine(
"output: {0,-24}{1}",
result.Members["ProcessName"].Value,
result.Members["Id"].Value);
}
Console.ReadKey();
}
static void Verbose_DataAdded(object sender, DataAddedEventArgs e)
{
Console.WriteLine( "verbose output: {0}", e.Index);
}
}
[Cmdlet("Get", "Colors")]
public class GetColorsCommand : Cmdlet
{
protected override void ProcessRecord()
{
this.WriteObject("Hello");
this.WriteVerbose("World");
}
}
$VerbosePreference
is set at least to "Continue."cmdlet
, and read VerboseRecord
instances from the Streams.Verbose
properyExample in powershell script:
ps> $ps = [powershell]::create()
ps> $ps.Commands.AddScript("`$verbosepreference='continue'; write-verbose 42")
ps> $ps.invoke()
ps> $ps.streams.verbose
Message InvocationInfo PipelineIterationInfo
------- -------------- ---------------------
42 System.Management.Automation.Invocat... {0, 0}
This should be easy to translate into C#.