Expand description
§Windows Powershell script runner
This crate is pretty basic. It uses std::process::Command to pipe commands
to PowerShell. In addition to that there is a convenient wrapper around process::Output
especially tailored towards the usecase of running Windows PowerShell commands.
§Example
I recommend that you write the commands to a *.ps file to be able to take advantage
of existing tools to create the script.
This example creates a shortcut of notepad.exe to the desktop.
In script.ps
$SourceFileLocation="C:\Windows\notepad.exe"
$ShortcutLocation=[Environment]::GetFolderPath("Desktop")+"\notepad.lnk"
$WScriptShell=New-Object -ComObject WScript.Shell
$Shortcut=$WScriptShell.CreateShortcut($ShortcutLocation)
$Shortcut.TargetPath=$SourceFileLocation
$Shortcut.Save()In main.rs
use crate powershell_script;
// Creates a shortcut to notpad on the desktop
fn main() {
let create_shortcut = include_str!("script.ps");
match powershell_script::run(create_shortcut) {
Ok(output) => {
println!("{}", output);
}
Err(e) => {
println!("Error: {}", e);
}
}
}You can of course provide the commands as a string literal instead. Just beware that
we run each line as a separate command.
The flag print_commands can be set to true if you want each
command to be printed to the stdout of the main process as they’re run which
can be useful for debugging scripts or displaying the progress.
§Use the PsScriptBuilder for better control
Instead of running a script using powershell_script::run() you can use
PsScriptBuilder to configure several options:
use powershell_script::PsScriptBuilder;
fn main() {
let ps = PsScriptBuilder::new()
.no_profile(true)
.non_interactive(true)
.hidden(false)
.print_commands(false)
.build();
let output = ps.run(r#"echo "hello world""#).unwrap();
assert!(output.stdout().unwrap().contains("hello world"));
}§Features and compatability
On Windows it defaults to using the PowerShell which ships with Windows, but you
can also run scripts using PowerShell Core on Windows by enabling the
core feature.
On all other operating systems it will run scripts using PowerShell core.
Structs§
- Output
- A convenient wrapper around
process::Outputwhich indicates if the script ran successfully or not and gives easy access to both the utf-8 parsed output ofstdoutorstderr. - PsScript
- PsScript
Builder - Builds a
PsScriptinstance with configurable options for running your script.
Enums§
Functions§
- run
- Runs a script in PowerShell. Returns an instance of
Output. In the case of a failure when running the script it returns anPsError::Powershell(Output)which holds the output object containing the captures ofstderrandstdoutfor display. The flagprint_commandscan be set totrueif you want each command to be printed to thestdoutof the main process as they’re run. Useful for debugging scripts.