commands detail - e
echo
echo
is an alias in PowerShell. As you would expect it’s an alias for the closest equivalent to the Linux echo
:
write-output
You use it as follows:
write-output "Blue is the colour"
As well as write-output there are a couple of options for use in Powershell scripts and functions:
write-debug
write-verbose
Whether these produce any output is controlled by commandline or environment flags.
echo -n
In bash, echo -n
echoes back the string without printing a newline, so if you do this:
$ echo -n Blue is the colour
you get:
Blue is the colour$
….with your cursor ending up on the same line as the output, just after the dollar prompt
Powershell has an exact equivalent of ‘echo -n’. If you type:
PS C:\Users\matt> write-host -nonewline "Blue is the colour"
….then you get this:
PS C:\Users\matt> write-host -nonewline "Blue is the colour"
Blue is the colourPS C:\Users\matt>
Note that -nonewline
doesn’t ‘work’ if you’re in the ISE.
egrep
The best PowerShell equivalent to egrep
or grep
is select-string
:
select-string stamford blue_flag.txt
A nice feature of select-string
which isn’t available in grep
is the -context
option. The -context switch allows you to see a specified number of lines either side of the matching one. I think this is similar to SEARCH /WINDOW
option in DCL.
egrep -i
Powershell is case-insensitive by default, so:
select-string stamford blue_flag.txt
…would return:
blue_flag.txt:3:From Stamford Bridge to Wembley
If you want to do a case sensitive search, then you can use:
select-string -casesensitive stamford blue_flag.txt
egrep -v
The Powershell equivalent to the -v
option would be -notmatch
select-string -notmatch stamford blue_flag.txt
egrep ‘this|that’
To search for more than one string within a file in bash, you use the syntax:
egrep 'blue|stamford' blue_flag.txt
This will return lines which contain either ‘blue’ or ‘stamford’.
The PowerShell equivalent is to seperate the two strings with a comma, so:
$ select-string stamford,blue blue_flag.txt
…returns:
blue_flag.txt:2:We'll keep the blue flag flying high
blue_flag.txt:3:From Stamford Bridge to Wembley
blue_flag.txt:4:We'll keep the blue flag flying high
| egrep -i sql
This is an interesting one, in that it points up a conceptual difference between PowerShell and Bash.
In bash, if you want to pipe into a grep, you would do this:
ps -ef | egrep sql
This would show you all the processes which include the string ‘sql’ somewhere in the line returned by ps
. The egrep is searching across the whole line. If the username is ‘mr_sql’ then a line would be returned, and if the process is ‘sqlplus’ than a line would also be returned.
To do something similar in PowerShell you would do something more specific
get-process | where processname -like '*sql*'
So the string ‘sql’ has to match the contents of the property processname
. As it happens, get-process by default only returns one text field, so in this case it’s relatively academic, but hopefully it illustrates the point.
env
The Linux ‘env’ shows all the environment variables.
In PowerShell there are two set of environment variables:
- windows-level variables and
- Powershell-level variable
Windows-level variables are given by:
Get-ChildItem Env: | fl
PowerShell-level variables are given by:
get-variable
errpt
I think errpt is possibly just an AIX thing (the linux equivalent is, I think, looking at /var/log/message
). It shows system error and log messages.
The PowerShell equivalent would be to look at the Windows eventlog, as follows
get-eventlog -computername bigserver -logname application -newest 15
The lognames that I typically look at are ‘system’, ‘application’ or ‘security’.
export PS1=”$ “
In bash the following changes the prompt when you are at the command line
export PS1="$ "
The Powershell equivalent to this is:
function prompt {
"$ "
}
I found this on Richard Siddaway’s Blog