Users Online

· Guests Online: 23

· Members Online: 0

· Total Members: 188
· Newest Member: meenachowdary055

Forum Threads

Newest Threads
No Threads created
Hottest Threads
No Threads created

Latest Articles

3 Proven ways to Learn Pipeline in Powershell

3 Proven ways to Learn Pipeline in Powershell

 

 

Pipeline in Powershell is one of the easy concepts but yet effective. In this tutorial, we will learn how to use the Pipeline correctly and making our scripts tidy in Powershell.

What is Pipeline?

Windows Powershell runs commands in a pipeline. Each command line we see is a pipeline. A pipeline can contain one or more commands, with multiple commands separated by a vertical pipe character ” | ” .

Commands execute from left to right, with the output of each command being piped or passed to the command after it. The output of the last command in the pipeline is what appears on your screen.

Get-Service #it is a single commad pipeline

#Multicommand pipelines looks similar
Get-Service| out-file servicelist.txt

Get-Service |out-file servicelist.txt doesn’t show any output do you know why?

Well, it stores the output directly to the text file mentioned after the pipeline. If you do understand this then you are on the right path.

Selecting, Sorting and Measuring objects

You must have understood the concept of Pipelining. Now let’s understand how we can use pipeling with select-objectsort-object, and measure-object. Let’s see how we can use the above pipelines with some examples.

Sorting-Objects on a Property

Sort-Object can re-sort objects in the pipeline.

Get-Service | Sort-Object Name Descending

Similarly, you can try Ascending in the above and try the output. 

Measuring-Object on a Property

Measure-Object can measure objects in the pipeline. We need to add -Property to specify the single numeric property. After -Property, we can add the following.

  •  -Average to calculate an average.
  • -Maximum to display the largest value.
  • -Minimum to display the smallest value.
  • -Sum to display the sum.

The Output will be a measurable or measurement object but not whatever we piped in. Let’s check out few examples you can try on your PC.

Get-Service | Measure-Object

Get-process | Measure-Object

2,0,5,6 | Measure-Object -Sum

2,0,5,6 | Measure-Object -maximum
 

Unable to delete unwanted software or software don't get cleaned up fully ?

Special Uninstaller is a great application to delete or uninstall software that is not required. The plus point is it clears every file and registry key associated with the application. It is available for Free and Premium with 24×7 support. Do try this application out.

 

Selecting a Subset of an Object

Select-object has no intelligence whatsoever and as the name suggests it is used for selection let’s check what it is actually used in and how we can use it in a script.

Below are some parameters which can be used with Select-Object.

  • -First for the beginning.
  • -Last for the end.
  • -Skip to skip a number of rows before selecting.

We cannot specify any criteria for choosing any specific rows. Let’s check out some examples we can try on our PC.

Get-Service | select-object -first 10

Get-process | select-object -first 10

This is one way of using Select-Object or Select, let’s check out another way we can use Select-object.

get-service |select-object -property Name -first 10

In this above example, we are selecting a specific property i.e. we have chosen Name and also selected the first 10 results. Similarly, we can try the same with other examples.

Conclusion

In this tutorial, we have understood what is Pipeline in Powershell, why to use it and how we can use it. We have also gone through selecting, sorting, and measuring objects and where we can use them with examples. You can try each example on your PC but make sure you have Powershell installed in it. Let’s meet you in our next blog soon and I hope you have understood something from this today.

 

Comments

No Comments have been Posted.

Post Comment

Please Login to Post a Comment.

Ratings

Rating is available to Members only.

Please login or register to vote.

No Ratings have been Posted.
Render time: 0.82 seconds
10,800,015 unique visits