How to delete folder from Task Scheduler with PowerShell? - powershell

I can create a Scheduled Task in Windows using the Register-ScheduledTask PowerShell cmdlet with a particular path (i.e., using -TaskPath "\SomePath\" and -TaskName "SomeName"). I can delete the Task using the Unregister-ScheduledTask with the same parameters. I can verify the deletion with the Windows "Task Scheduler" GUI. However, the folder ("\SomePath\") does not get deleted. While this makes perfect sense, I cannot find any way to delete this empty folder.
How do I delete an empty Task Scheduler folder using PowerShell?
UPDATE: After more research, I found another way to solve this problem within PowerShell. It involves working with a Schedule.Service object. Here is the code to delete a folder called 'My Task Folder':
$scheduleObject = New-Object -ComObject Schedule.Service
$scheduleObject.connect()
$rootFolder = $scheduleObject.GetFolder("\")
$rootFolder.DeleteFolder("My Task Folder",$null)

ScheduledTasks are just xml files which are stored here:
Get-ChildItem -Path 'C:\Windows\System32\Tasks'
You can just delete them from there. They are also referenced from the registry here:
HKLM\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows NT\CurrentVersion\Schedule\TaskCache
Just use the...
Remove-Item -Path 'somepath' -Force
... cmdlet as you normally would for any file or folder.
Now of course, if there is a file/folder attribute set, that is preventing the delete, just remove that.

To delete the task folder called "MEGA" in CMD (or BAT file):
powershell -c "$scheduleObject = New-Object -ComObject Schedule.Service; $scheduleObject.connect(); $rootFolder = $scheduleObject.GetFolder('\'); $rootFolder.DeleteFolder('MEGA',$null)"
Thanks to #jrsrjrsr for Powershell commands.

Related

Powershell script runs but task scheduler wont run it

I have a powershell script that runs in ISE but wont run in Task Scheduler. It is a simple powershell script to move a file... I have it set to run at a specific time in task scheduler, but it wont run. When I try to run it manually from task scheduler, it gets stuck on running. Its moving the file to a mapped drive. I have the task scheduler set to run whether the user is logged on or not and with higest priviledges and its also under an admin account... Based upon research, I found articles about the PSDrive cmdlet if you are using mapped drives but I dont know how to incorporate it into my script...Can anyone help me incorporate the PSDrive cmdlet if this is the issue, thanks.
Set-ExecutionPolicy Bypass -scope Process -Force
$_SourcePath = "C:\lilsis\seniors_allcourses.csv"
$_DestinationPath = "Z:\"
Copy-item –path $_SourcePath –destination $_DestinationPath -force
enter image description here

Play video with powershell on Windows 10

I tried to use the code of this post.
When I use this code directly on PowerShell terminal it run correctly.
Add-Type -AssemblyName presentationCore
$filepath = "C:\Temp\test\Wildlife.wmv"
$wmplayer = New-Object System.Windows.Media.MediaPlayer
$wmplayer.Open($filepath)
Start-Sleep 2
$duration = $wmplayer.NaturalDuration.TimeSpan.Seconds
$wmplayer.Close()
start playing
$proc = Start-process -FilePath wmplayer.exe -ArgumentList $filepath -PassThru
But when I run the code on .bat file, a cmd window appears and disappears in a few seconds and without further action.
If I run the .bat file on CMD, this errors appear:
enter image description here
The code inserted in .bat file is:
Add-Type -AssemblyName presentationCore
$filepath = [uri] "C:\Users\??????\Desktop\small.mp4"
$wmplayer = New-Object System.Windows.Media.MediaPlayer
$wmplayer.Open($filepath)
Start-Sleep 2 # This allows the $wmplayer time to load the audio file
$duration = $wmplayer.NaturalDuration.TimeSpan.TotalSeconds
$wmplayer.Play()
Start-Sleep $duration
$wmplayer.Stop()
$wmplayer.Close()
I would be most thankful if you could help me solving this problem.
Thanks.
You are attempting to run PowerShell commands within a .bat file (as a result the PowerShell engine isn't being used to execute the code so the commands fail).
You need to save the script as a .ps1 file, then execute it from the command-line either via it's full path name or by changing to the directory where the script exists and entering:
.\scriptname.ps1
Where scriptname is the name you saved the file at.
If you want to execute the script via a .bat file, you still need to save it as a .ps1 and then create a .bat file with the following content:
Powershell.exe -File C:\path\to\my\script\myscript.ps1
Obviously correcting the path accordingly. Note there is no advantage to running the script this way, but one reason you might use a .bat file is if you needed to change the execution policy to allow script execution (I don't think you do in your case) as follows:
Powershell.exe -executionpolicy unrestricted -File C:\path\to\my\script\myscript.ps1

Powershell executing .exe file without the folder path

I am fairly new to powershell and I am trying to create a script that executes a .exe file. I can execute them on my machine no problem because the folder path is hard coded. The problem is that if I shift this script to another computer, the .exe it calls might be located in a different folder structure. Example
My computer:
D:\Folder1\subfolder\RunMe.exe
Client computer might be
D:\RunMe\subfolder\RunMe.exe
I just need it to execute the RunMe.exe no matter where it is. Is there a way to do this in powershell?
# 1. Get the location of RunMe.exe
$RunMe = Get-ChildItem -Path d:\* -Include RunMe.exe -Recurse;
# 2. Invoke RunMe.exe
Start-Process -FilePath $RunMe[0].FullName -Wait -NoNewWindow;

How do I run a PowerShell script when the computer starts?

I have a PowerShell script that monitors an image folder. I need to find a way to automatically run this script after the computer starts.
I already tried the following methods, but I couldn't get it working.
Use msconfig and add the PowerShell script to startup, but I cannot find the PowerShell script on that list.
Create a shortcut and drop it to startup folder. No luck.
%SystemRoot%\SysWOW64\WindowsPowerShell\v1.0\powershell.exe -File "C:\Doc\Files\FileMonitor.ps1"
or
%SystemRoot%\system32\WindowsPowerShell\v1.0\powershell.exe -File "C:\Doc\Files\FileMonitor.ps1"
Here's my PowerShell script:
$folder = "C:\\Doc\\Files"
$dest = "C:\\Doc\\Files\\images"
$filter = "*.jpg"
$fsw = new-object System.IO.FileSystemWatcher $folder, $filter -Property #{
IncludeSubDirectories=$false
NotifyFilter = [System.IO.NotifyFilters]'FileName, LastWrite'
}
$onCreated = Register-ObjectEvent $fsw Created -SourceIdentifier FileCreated -Action {
Start-Sleep -s 10
Move-Item -Path C:\Doc\Files\*.jpg C:\Doc\Files\images
}
I also tried to add a basic task using taskschd.msc. It is still not working.
Here's what I found, and maybe that will help to debug it.
If I open up a PowerShell window and run the script there, it works. But if I run it in a command prompt,
powershell.exe -File "C:\Doc\Files\FileMonitor.ps1"
It will not work. I am not sure it's a permission problem or something else.
BTW, I have PowerShell 3.0 installed, and if I type $host.version, it will show 3 there. But my powershell.exe seems like it is still v1.0.
%SystemRoot%\system32\WindowsPowerShell\v1.0\powershell.exe
I finally got my PowerShell script to run automatically on every startup. You will need to create two files: the first is the Powershell script (e.g. script.ps1) and the second is a .cmd file that will contain commands that will run on the command prompt (e.g. startup.cmd).
The second file is what needs to be executed when the computer starts up, and simply copy-pasting the .ps1 to the startup folder won't work, because that doesn't actually execute the script - it only opens the file with Notepad. You need to execute the .cmd which itself will execute the .ps1 using PowerShell. Ok, enough babbling and on to the steps:
Create your .ps1 script and place it in a folder. I put it on my desktop for simplicity. The path would look something like this:
%USERPROFILE%\Desktop\script.ps1
Create a .cmd file and place it in
%AppData%\Microsoft\Windows\Start Menu\Programs\Startup\startup.cmd
Doing this will execute the cmd file every time on startup. Here is a link of how to create a .cmd file if you need help.
Open the .cmd file with a text editor and enter the following lines:
PowerShell -Command "Set-ExecutionPolicy Unrestricted" >> "%TEMP%\StartupLog.txt" 2>&1
PowerShell %USERPROFILE%\Desktop\script.ps1 >> "%TEMP%\StartupLog.txt" 2>&1
This will do two things:
Set the Execution Policy of your PowerShell to Unrestricted. This is needed to run scripts or else PowerShell will not do it.
Use PowerShell to execute the .ps1 script found in the path specified.
This code is specifically for PowerShell v1.0. If you're running PowerShell v2.0 it might be a little different. In any case, check this source for the .cmd code.
Save the .cmd file
Now that you have your .ps1 and .cmd files in their respective paths and with the script for each, you are all set.
You could set it up as a Scheduled Task, and set the Task Trigger for "At Startup"
What I do is create a shortcut that I place in shell:startup.
The shortcut has the following:
Target: C:\Windows\System32\WindowsPowerShell\v1.0\powershell.exe -Command "C:\scripts\script.ps1"
(replacing scripts\scripts.ps1 with what you need)
Start In: C:\scripts
(replacing scripts with folder which has your script)
You could create a Scheduler Task that runs automatically on the start, even when the user is not logged in:
schtasks /create /tn "FileMonitor" /sc onstart /delay 0000:30 /rl highest /ru system /tr "powershell.exe -file C:\Doc\Files\FileMonitor.ps1"
Run this command once from a PowerShell as Admin and it will create a schedule task for you. You can list the task like this:
schtasks /Query /TN "FileMonitor" /V /FO List
or delete it
schtasks /Delete /TN "FileMonitor"
This is really just an expansion on #mjolinor simple answer [Use Task Scheduler].
I knew "Task Scheduler" was the correct way, but it took a bit of effort to get it running the way I wanted and thought I'd post my finding for others.
Issues including:
Redirecting output to logs
Hiding the PowerShell window
Note: You must have permission to run script see ExecutionPolicy
Then in Task Scheduler, the most important/tricky part is the Action
It should be Start a Program
Program/Script:
powershell
Add arguments (optional) :
-windowstyle hidden -command full\path\script.ps1 >> "%TEMP%\StartupLog.txt" 2>&1
Note:
If you see -File on the internet, it will work, but understand nothing can be after -File except the File Path, IE: The redirect is taken to be part of the file path and it fails, you must use -command in conjunction with redirect, but you can prepend additional commands/arguments such as -windowstyle hidden to not show PowerShell window.
I had to adjust all Write-Host to Write-Output in my script as well.
Try this: create a shortcut in startup folder and input
PowerShell "& 'PathToFile\script.ps1'"
This is the easiest way.
Prerequisite:
1. Start powershell with the "Run as Administrator" option
2. Enable running unsigned scripts with:
set-executionpolicy remotesigned
3. prepare your powershell script and know its path:
$path = "C:\Users\myname\myscript.ps1"
Steps:
1. setup a trigger, see also New-JobTrigger (PSScheduledJob) - PowerShell | Microsoft Docs
$trigger = New-JobTrigger -AtStartup -RandomDelay 00:00:30
2. register a scheduled job, see also Register-ScheduledJob (PSScheduledJob) - PowerShell | Microsoft Docs
Register-ScheduledJob -Trigger $trigger -FilePath $path -Name MyScheduledJob
you can check it with Get-ScheduledJob -Name MyScheduledJob
3. Reboot Windows (restart /r) and check the result with:
Get-Job -name MyScheduledJob
see also Get-Job (Microsoft.PowerShell.Core) - PowerShell | Microsoft Docs
References:
How to enable execution of PowerShell scripts? - Super User
Use PowerShell to Create Job that Runs at Startup | Scripting Blog
Copy ps1 into this folder, and create it if necessary. It will run at every start-up (before user logon occurs).
C:\Windows\System32\GroupPolicy\Machine\Scripts\Startup
Also it can be done through GPEDIT.msc if available on your OS build (lower level OS maybe not).
Be sure, whenever you want PowerShell to run automatically / in the background / non-interactive, it’s a good idea to specify the parameters
-ExecutionPolicy Bypass to PowerShell.exe
PowerShell.exe -ExecutionPolicy Bypass
I have a script that starts a file system watcher as well, but once the script window is closed the watcher dies. It will run all day if I start it from a powershell window and leave it open, but the minute I close it the script stops doing what it is supposed to.
You need to start the script and have it keep powershell open.
I tried numerous ways to do this, but the one that actually worked was from http://www.methos-it.com/blogs/keep-your-powershell-script-open-when-executed
param ( $Show )
if ( !$Show )
{
PowerShell -NoExit -File $MyInvocation.MyCommand.Path 1
return
}
Pasting that to the top of the script is what made it work.
I start the script from command line with
powershell.exe -noexit -command "& \path\to\script.ps1"
A relatively short path to specifying a Powershell script to execute at startup in Windows could be:
Click the Windows-button (Windows-button + r)
Enter this:
shell:startup
Create a new shortcut by rightclick and in context menu choose menu item: New=>Shortcut
Create a shortcut to your script, e.g:
C:\Windows\System32\WindowsPowerShell\v1.0\powershell.exe -NoProfile -Command "C:\Users\someuser\Documents\WindowsPowerShell\Scripts\somesscript.ps1"
Note the use of -NoProfile
In case you put a lot of initializing in your $profile file, it is inefficient to load this up to just run a Powershell script. The -NoProfile will skip loading your profile file and is smart to specify, if it is not necessary to run it before the Powershell script is to be executed.
Here you see such a shortcut created (.lnk file with a Powershell icon with shortcut glyph):
This worked for me. Created a Scheduled task with below details:
Trigger : At startup
Actions:
Program/script : powershell.exe
Arguments : -file
You can see scripts and more scheduled for startup inside Task Manager in the Startup tab. Here is how to add a new item to the scheduled startup items.
First, open up explorer to shell:startup location via start-button => run:
explorer shell:startup
Right click in that folder and in the context menu select a new shortcut. Enter the following:
C:\Windows\System32\WindowsPowerShell\v1.0\powershell.exe -NoProfile
-Command "C:\myfolder\somescript.ps1"
This will startup a Powershell script without starting up your $profile scripts for faster execution. This will make sure that the powershell script is started up.
The shell:startup folder is in:
$env:APPDATA\Microsoft\Windows
And then into the folder:
Start Menu\Programs\Startup
As usual, Microsoft makes things a bit cumbersome for us when a path contains spaces, so you have to put quotes around the full path or just hit tab inside Powershell to autocomplete in this case.
If you do not want to worry about execution policy, you can use the following and put into a batch script. I use this a lot when having techs at sites run my scripts since half the time they say script didnt work but really it's cause execution policy was undefined our restricted. This will run script even if execution policy would normally block a script to run.
If you want it to run at startup. Then you can place in either shell:startup for a single user or shell:common startup for all users who log into the PC.
cmd.exe /c Powershell.exe -ExecutionPolicy ByPass -File "c:\path\to\script.ps1"
Obviously, making a GPO is your best method if you have a domain and place in Scripts (Startup/Shutdown); under either Computer or User Configurations\Windows Settings\Scripts (Startup/Shutdown).
If you go that way make a directory called Startup or something under **
\\yourdomain.com\netlogon\
and put it there to reference in the GPO. This way you know the DC has rights to execute it. When you browse for the script on the DC you will find it under
C:\Windows\SYSVOL\domain\scripts\Startup\
since this is the local path of netlogon.
Execute PowerShell command below to run the PowerShell script .ps1 through the task scheduler at user login.
Register-ScheduledTask -TaskName "SOME TASKNAME" -Trigger (New-ScheduledTaskTrigger -AtLogon) -Action (New-ScheduledTaskAction -Execute "${Env:WinDir}\System32\WindowsPowerShell\v1.0\powershell.exe" -Argument "-WindowStyle Hidden -Command `"& 'C:\PATH\TO\FILE.ps1'`"") -RunLevel Highest -Force;
-AtLogOn - indicates that a trigger starts a task when a user logs on.
-AtStartup - indicates that a trigger starts a task when the system is started.
-WindowStyle Hidden - don't show PowerShell window at startup. Remove if not required.
-RunLevel Highest - run PowerShell as administrator. Remove if not required.
P.S.
If necessary execute PowerShell command below to enable PowerShell scripts execution.
Set-ExecutionPolicy -Scope LocalMachine -ExecutionPolicy Unrestricted -Force;
Bypass - nothing is blocked and there are no warnings or prompts.
Unrestricted - loads all configuration files and runs all scripts. If you run an unsigned script that was downloaded from the internet, you're prompted for permission before it runs.
I 'm aware that people around here don't need a tool like this. But I think it will be useful especially for novice users. Auto start tool It is a Portable freeware which designed to simplify the process to automatically launch an App or script when you login to Windows. It offers 3 different options for autostart
Task Scheduler
Startup folder
Registry run key
The best part of the tool is supports powershell scripts (.Ps1) . this means that you can run a Powershell script automatically at system startup with all 3 methods.
Download
https://disk.yandex.com.tr/d/dFzyB2Fu4lC-Ww
Source:
https://www.portablefreeware.com/forums/viewtopic.php?f=4&t=25761
One thing I found. if you are using Write-Host within your PowerShell scripts, and are also using Task Scheduler (as shown in the posts above), you don't get all the output from the command line.
powershell.exe -command C:\scripts\script.ps1 >> "C:\scripts\logfile.log"
In my case, I was only seeing output from commands that ran successfully from the PowerShell script.
My conclusion so far is PowerShell uses Out-File to output to another command or in this case a log file.
So if you use *> instead of >> you get all the output from the CLI for your PowerShell script, and you can keep using Write-Host within your script.
powershell.exe -command C:\scripts\script.ps1 *> "C:\scripts\logfile.log"
https://lazyadmin.nl/powershell/output-to-file/
You can also run the script in the background, regardless of user login.
Within your task in Task Scheduler set "Run whether user is logged on or not", and then in the password prompt type your hostname\username then your password (In my case an account with Admin permissions).
I used Set-ExecutionPolicy RemoteSigned -Scope CurrentUser to get around the script execution problem. I still would have preferred to run it on a per-process basis though. A problem for another time.

PowerShell: Run command from script's directory

I have a PowerShell script that does some stuff using the script’s current directory. So when inside that directory, running .\script.ps1 works correctly.
Now I want to call that script from a different directory without changing the referencing directory of the script. So I want to call ..\..\dir\script.ps1 and still want that script to behave as it was called from inside its directory.
How do I do that, or how do I modify a script so it can run from any directory?
Do you mean you want the script's own path so you can reference a file next to the script? Try this:
$scriptpath = $MyInvocation.MyCommand.Path
$dir = Split-Path $scriptpath
Write-host "My directory is $dir"
You can get a lot of info from $MyInvocation and its properties.
If you want to reference a file in the current working directory, you can use Resolve-Path or Get-ChildItem:
$filepath = Resolve-Path "somefile.txt"
EDIT (based on comment from OP):
# temporarily change to the correct folder
Push-Location $dir
# do stuff, call ant, etc
# now back to previous directory
Pop-Location
There's probably other ways of achieving something similar using Invoke-Command as well.
There are answers with big number of votes, but when I read your question, I thought you wanted to know the directory where the script is, not that where the script is running. You can get the information with powershell's auto variables
$PSScriptRoot # the directory where the script exists, not the
# target directory the script is running in
$PSCommandPath # the full path of the script
For example, I have a $profile script that finds a Visual Studio solution file and starts it. I wanted to store the full path, once a solution file is started. But I wanted to save the file where the original script exists. So I used $PsScriptRoot.
If you're calling native apps, you need to worry about [Environment]::CurrentDirectory not about PowerShell's $PWD current directory. For various reasons, PowerShell does not set the process' current working directory when you Set-Location or Push-Location, so you need to make sure you do so if you're running applications (or cmdlets) that expect it to be set.
In a script, you can do this:
$CWD = [Environment]::CurrentDirectory
Push-Location $MyInvocation.MyCommand.Path
[Environment]::CurrentDirectory = $PWD
## Your script code calling a native executable
Pop-Location
# Consider whether you really want to set it back:
# What if another runspace has set it in-between calls?
[Environment]::CurrentDirectory = $CWD
There's no foolproof alternative to this. Many of us put a line in our prompt function to set [Environment]::CurrentDirectory ... but that doesn't help you when you're changing the location within a script.
Two notes about the reason why this is not set by PowerShell automatically:
PowerShell can be multi-threaded. You can have multiple Runspaces (see RunspacePool, and the PSThreadJob module) running simultaneously withinin a single process. Each runspace has it's own $PWD present working directory, but there's only one process, and only one Environment.
Even when you're single-threaded, $PWD isn't always a legal CurrentDirectory (you might CD into the registry provider for instance).
If you want to put it into your prompt (which would only run in the main runspace, single-threaded), you need to use:
[Environment]::CurrentDirectory = Get-Location -PSProvider FileSystem
This would work fine.
Push-Location $PSScriptRoot
Write-Host CurrentDirectory $CurDir
I often used the following code to import a module which sit under the same directory as the running script. It will first get the directory from which powershell is running
$currentPath=Split-Path ((Get-Variable
MyInvocation -Scope
0).Value).MyCommand.Path
import-module "$currentPath\sqlps.ps1"
I made a one-liner out of #JohnL's solution:
$MyInvocation.MyCommand.Path | Split-Path | Push-Location
Well I was looking for solution for this for a while, without any scripts just from CLI. This is how I do it xD:
Navigate to folder from which you want to run script (important thing is that you have tab completions)
..\..\dir
Now surround location with double quotes, and inside them add cd, so we could invoke another instance of powershell.
"cd ..\..\dir"
Add another command to run script separated by ;, with is a command separator in powershell
"cd ..\..\dir\; script.ps1"
Finally Run it with another instance of powershell
start powershell "cd..\..\dir\; script.ps1"
This will open new powershell window, go to ..\..\dir, run script.ps1 and close window.
Note that ";" just separates commands, like you typed them one by one, if first fails second will run and next after, and next after... If you wanna keep new powershell window open you add -noexit in passed command . Note that I first navigate to desired folder so I could use tab completions (you couldn't in double quotes).
start powershell "-noexit cd..\..\dir\; script.ps1"
Use double quotes "" so you could pass directories with spaces in names e.g.,
start powershell "-noexit cd '..\..\my dir'; script.ps1"