Powershell - change file Date Created and Date Modified based on Filename - powershell

I have lots of file scanned PDF documents that have the file named with an included date. For example:
FileA_2017-10-15.pdf
FileB_2016-04-08.pdf
FileC_2018-01-30.pdf
some files also are formatted with an underscore at the end as well such as...
FileD_2018-01-30_1.pdf
FileE_2018-01-30_2.pdf
there are even a few that have two underscores before the date such as...
FileF_Example_2018-01-30_1.pdf
FileG_Example_2018-01-30_2.pdf
Unfortunately, the date they were scanned in is different than the actual date of the document. So the "Date Created" and "Date Modified" attributes are different than what is shown in the file name.
I would like a script that I could run to change the "Date Created" and "Date Modified" to match that of the filename.
I attempted this using someone else's script but I don't know enough about PowerShell to make it actually work. Note that I do not want to change the name of the file, only the time stamp.
$Directory = "C:\TestFolder"
$DateFormat = "yyyy-MM-dd"
foreach ($file in (Get-ChildItem $Directory)) {
$date_from_file=GetFileName::[datetime])
$file.CreationTime = $date_from_file
$file.LastAccessTime = $date_from_file
$file.LastWriteTime = $date_from_file
Write-Host ($file.Name + " - " + $date_from_file)
}
The code above can be scraped if something else has already been written since what I have doesn't work.
Edit
Wondering if it would also be possible to add to the script so that it could include files in sub-folders as well. Maybe it could be scripted in a way that would only consider the files in a folder if the Date Modified on the folder is today. I would like to run this on a parent folder that could potentially have many sub-folders and if those folders don't have a "Date Modified" of today, then it should skip the files in that folder. I was thinking that could speed up the process. Open to thoughts and thanks for the help!

You are quite near, you need
split the date part from filename and convert it to a [datetime]
I use a RegEx with a capture group anchored at the end $ of the BaseName
## Q:\Test\2019\05\19\SO_56211626.ps1
$Directory = "C:\TestFolder"
foreach ($file in (Get-ChildItem -Path $Directory -Filter *.pdf)){
if($File.BaseName -match '_(\d{4}-\d{2}-\d{2})(_\d)?$'){
$date_from_file= (Get-Date $Matches[1])
$file.CreationTime = $date_from_file
$file.LastAccessTime = $date_from_file
$file.LastWriteTime = $date_from_file
$file | Select-Object Name,CreationTime,LastAccessTime,LastWriteTime
}
}
Sample output:
> Q:\Test\2019\05\19\SO_56211626.ps1
Name CreationTime LastAccessTime LastWriteTime
---- ------------ -------------- -------------
FileA_2017-10-15.pdf 2017-10-15 00:00:00 2017-10-15 00:00:00 2017-10-15 00:00:00
FileB_2016-04-08.pdf 2016-04-08 00:00:00 2016-04-08 00:00:00 2016-04-08 00:00:00
FileC_2018-01-30.pdf 2018-01-30 00:00:00 2018-01-30 00:00:00 2018-01-30 00:00:00
An English locale (en-US) produces:
Name CreationTime LastAccessTime LastWriteTime
---- ------------ -------------- -------------
FileA_2017-10-15.pdf 10/15/2017 12:00:00 AM 10/15/2017 12:00:00 AM 10/15/2017 12:00:00 AM
FileB_2016-04-08.pdf 4/8/2016 12:00:00 AM 4/8/2016 12:00:00 AM 4/8/2016 12:00:00 AM
FileC_2018-01-30.pdf 1/30/2018 12:00:00 AM 1/30/2018 12:00:00 AM 1/30/2018 12:00:00 AM

[
edit - since the OP is getting very strange errors with my suggested fix - errors that i cannot reproduce with the sample data - i've changed this answer to the full suggested code.
edit 2 - added new file name variants and code to deal with them.
edit 3 - changed from splitting to a regex match since the sample data has changed yet again. [*sigh ...*]
]
you are not actually creating the datetime object that you need. the $date_from_file= line doesn't actually do anything other than create red error msgs ... [grin]
replace this line ...
$date_from_file=GetFileName::[datetime])
... with this line ...
$date_from_file = [datetime]::ParseExact($File.BaseName.Split('_')[-1], $DateFormat, $Null)
... and your $date_from_file variable will contain a proper [datetime] object that will work in your assignments.
i would likely change the sequence of those assignments to put the $file.LastAccessTime = $date_from_file LAST so that it doesn't get changed by the next line.
also, that value will change any time that the file is accessed, so it may not be worth changing. [grin]
here is the full script along with what it does -
what it does ...
sets the location & the date format to use
creates a set of test files from the OPs sample file names
gets the files from the source
converts the .BaseName into a [datetime] object
assigns the .CreationTime, .LastWriteTime, & .LastAccessTime values to the datetime from the file name
displays the changed values
here is the code ...
$Directory = $env:TEMP
$DateFormat = "yyyy-MM-dd"
# create some test files
$TestFileList = #(
'FileA_2017-10-15.pdf'
'FileB_2016-04-08.pdf'
'FileC_2018-01-30.pdf'
'FileD_2019-09-09_1.pdf'
'FileE_2015-05-05_2.pdf'
)
foreach ($TFL_Item in $TestFileList)
{
$Null = New-Item -Path $Directory -Name $TFL_Item -ItemType File -Force
}
$FileList = Get-ChildItem -LiteralPath $Directory -Filter '*.pdf' -File
foreach ($FL_Item in $FileList) {
# removed split, added regex match to work with ever-growing list of variant file names
$Null = $FL_Item.BaseName -match '_(?<DateString>\d{4}-\d{2}-\d{2})'
$DateString = $Matches.DateString
$date_from_file = [datetime]::ParseExact($DateString, $DateFormat, $Null)
$FL_Item.CreationTime = $date_from_file
$FL_Item.LastWriteTime = $date_from_file
$FL_Item.LastAccessTime = $date_from_file
# show the resulting datetime info
'=' * 20
$CurrentFileInfo = Get-Item -LiteralPath $FL_Item.FullName
$CurrentFileInfo.FullName
$CurrentFileInfo.CreationTime
$CurrentFileInfo.LastWriteTime
$CurrentFileInfo.LastAccessTime
}
screen output ...
====================
C:\Temp\FileA_2017-10-15.pdf
2017 October 15, Sunday 12:00:00 AM
2017 October 15, Sunday 12:00:00 AM
2017 October 15, Sunday 12:00:00 AM
====================
C:\Temp\FileB_2016-04-08.pdf
2016 April 08, Friday 12:00:00 AM
2016 April 08, Friday 12:00:00 AM
2016 April 08, Friday 12:00:00 AM
====================
C:\Temp\FileC_2018-01-30.pdf
2018 January 30, Tuesday 12:00:00 AM
2018 January 30, Tuesday 12:00:00 AM
2018 January 30, Tuesday 12:00:00 AM
====================
C:\Temp\FileD_2019-09-09_1.pdf
2019 September 09, Monday 12:00:00 AM
2019 September 09, Monday 12:00:00 AM
2019 September 09, Monday 12:00:00 AM
====================
C:\Temp\FileE_2015-05-05_2.pdf
2015 May 05, Tuesday 12:00:00 AM
2015 May 05, Tuesday 12:00:00 AM
2015 May 05, Tuesday 12:00:00 AM
i checked the files directly in explorer & they match the displayed values.

Thanks. I was stuck without this thread. I ended up with a variation that matched any filename with a correctly formatted date, thus:
# Call like:
# powershell -NoLogo -ExecutionPolicy Unrestricted -Sta -NonInteractive -WindowStyle Normal -File ".\Rename_files_selected_folders_ModifyDateStamps.ps1" -Folder "T:\files"
# 1. capture a commandline parameter 1 as a mandatory "Folder string" with a default value
param ( [Parameter(Mandatory=$true)] [string]$Folder = "T:\HDTV\autoTVS-mpg\Converted" )
[console]::BufferWidth = 512
$DateFormat = "yyyy-MM-dd"
write-output "Processing Folder: ",$Folder
# 2. Iterate the files
$FileList = Get-ChildItem -Recurse $Folder -Include '*.mp4','*.bprj','*.ts' -File
foreach ($FL_Item in $FileList) {
$ixxx = $FL_Item.BaseName -match '(?<DateString>\d{4}-\d{2}-\d{2})'
if($ixxx){
#write-output $FL_Item.FullName
$DateString = $Matches.DateString
$date_from_file = [datetime]::ParseExact($DateString, $DateFormat, $Null)
$FL_Item.CreationTime = $date_from_file
$FL_Item.LastWriteTime = $date_from_file
$FL_Item | Select-Object FullName,CreationTime,LastWriteTime
}
}
# https://stackoverflow.com/questions/56211626/powershell-change-file-date-created-and-date-modified-based-on-filename

Related

Powershell sorts by MM/DD/YY, HH:MM AM/PM

Importing a CSV file that has date/time values a column "Expiration" as "MM/DD/YY, HH:MM AM" (or PM). When I parse through the file I store it in an object of type System.Collections.ArrayList (not sure that matters) and I'd like to export the results in descending date/time order. When I use:
Sort-Object -Property Expiration -Descending
It sorts the results mostly in order but by the 1st integer of the DD portion so it looks like this:
2/1/21, 3:54 AM
2/11/21, 7:59 AM
2/2/21, 4:44 AM
2/21/21, 6:24 AM
2/3/21, 3:58 AM
2/4/21, 3:59 AM
What can I do to get this sorted properly upon export? I also tried sorting A-Z in Excel upon output but it does the same thing.
That is because these are strings, not real DateTime objects. You need to make them DateTime objects.
By default, this...
2/1/21, 3:54 AM
2/11/21, 7:59 AM
2/2/21, 4:44 AM
2/21/21, 6:24 AM
2/3/21, 3:58 AM
2/4/21, 3:59 AM
... on import will be separate columns if no header is specified, and only the date, not time, if the property used. These strings must be properly quoted to be read as one column.
"Expiration"
"2/1/21, 3:54 AM"
"2/11/21, 7:59 AM"
"2/2/21, 4:44 AM"
"2/21/21, 6:24 AM"
"2/3/21, 3:58 AM"
"2/4/21, 3:59 AM"
Example - Date actions
Sort-Object { $PSitem.Expiration -as [datetime] }
# Or these
$sortedDates = $dates |
Sort-Object {[System.DateTime]::ParseExact($PSItem, "MM/dd/yyyy", $null)}
# Or DateTIme parsing/formatting like these
[DateTime]"2020-7-16"
[DateTime]"Jul-16"
'{0:yyyy-MM-dd}' -f [DateTime]'Jul-16'
# Or
[datetime]::parseexact($PSitem.Expiration, 'dd-MMM-yy', $null)
# Output DateTime
[datetime]::parseexact($PSitem.Expiration, 'dd-MMM-yy', $null).ToString('yyyy-MM-dd')
# Or accept the default of ParseExect.
Import-CSV -Path 'C:\Scripts\Dates.csv' |
ForEach {[DateTime]::Parse($PSitem.Expiration)} |
Sort-Object
# Results
<#
Monday, February 1, 2021 3:54:00 AM
Tuesday, February 2, 2021 4:44:00 AM
Wednesday, February 3, 2021 3:58:00 AM
Thursday, February 4, 2021 3:59:00 AM
Thursday, February 11, 2021 7:59:00 AM
Sunday, February 21, 2021 6:24:00 AM
#>
Import-CSV -Path 'C:\Scripts\Dates.csv' |
ForEach {[DateTime]::Parse($PSitem.Expiration)} |
Sort-Object -Descending
# Results
<#
Sunday, February 21, 2021 6:24:00 AM
Thursday, February 11, 2021 7:59:00 AM
Thursday, February 4, 2021 3:59:00 AM
Wednesday, February 3, 2021 3:58:00 AM
Tuesday, February 2, 2021 4:44:00 AM
Monday, February 1, 2021 3:54:00 AM
#>
See also: PowerTip: Use PowerShell to Format Dates

How can I ingest random-formatted dates in PowerShell

I have a login tracker log file that is an amalgamation of multiple sources. The sources (and there are many) use a variety of date formats. I am using the resultant $objList object to hand these over to a SQL Database. When I try to then use SQL Queries, I am missing data.
Here is a small slice of the raw input, from September 2007:
Logon;Username;Server01;10/09/2007 09:56:40
Logon;Username;Server02;10/09/2007 11:26:20
Logon;Username;Server03;9/11/2007 10:16:27 AM
Logon;Username;Server04;11/09/2007 12:28:45
Notice the 3rd one is American format, the others are European. I need a way of getting these things to ingest into a script in a consistent date format. There are literally hundreds of thousands of lines in this file, so it is not realistic to go through by hand and modify anything.
Here is what I have so far.
IF ($SplitUsr.Count -eq '4')
{
$varAction = $SplitUsr[0]
IF ($varAction -eq 'Logon')
{
$varActionx = $SplitUsr[0].Trim()
$varUser = $SplitUsr[1].Trim()
$varHostname = $SplitUsr[2].Trim()
$varTime = $SplitUsr[3].Trim()
try {$datetime = [dateTime]::Parse("$varTime",([Globalization.CultureInfo]::CreateSpecificCulture('en-GB')))}
catch [System.Management.Automation.MethodInvocationException]
{
$datetime = [dateTime]::Parse("$varTime",([Globalization.CultureInfo]::CreateSpecificCulture('en-US')))
}
$objLogon = New-Object PSObject
$objLogon | Add-Member -Membertype NoteProperty -Name "Entry" -Value $intCount
$objLogon | Add-Member -Membertype NoteProperty -Name "Logon" -Value '1'
$objLogon | Add-Member -Membertype NoteProperty -Name "User" -Value $varUser
$objLogon | Add-Member -Membertype NoteProperty -Name "Hostname" -Value $varHostname
$objLogon | Add-Member -Membertype NoteProperty -Name "Date" -Value $datetime
$objList += $objLogon
Unfortunately, this is parsing them into
10 September 2007 09:56:40
10 September 2007 11:26:20
09 November 2007 10:16:27
11 September 2007 12:28:45
You can see that the 3rd example, the one with the American formatting in the raw data, came out as November instead of the 11 September (inverting the 9 and 11).
The same thing is happening all over the place. When I look at the SQL entries for December, here's what I'm getting:
07 December 2007 09:53:33
07 December 2007 11:37:48
12 July 2007 13:25:02
07 December 2007 13:26:38
07 December 2007 15:04:56
You can see that the third one somehow got the 12 and 7 inverted. This is the problem I'm trying to resolve.
Any suggestions?
Edit: A few more samples:
Logon;Username;Server01;18/11/2008 11:19:08
Logon;Username;Server02;18/11/2008 11:21:46 AM
Logon;Username;Server03;18/11/2008 14:28:30
Logon;Username;Server04;19/11/2008 09:55:50
Logon;Username;Servername;19/11/2008 14:14:09
Logon;Username;Servername;19/11/2008 14:19:56
Logon;Username;Servername;20/11/2008 12:19:57 PM
Not all the AM/PM indicate American formatting, unfortunately.
This is the "KI" you was speaking of:
$dates = #( '10/09/2007 09:56:40',
'09/10/2007 11:26:20',
'10/09/2007 10:16:27 AM',
'10/09/2007 12:28:45' )
$cultureUS = [CultureInfo]::CreateSpecificCulture("en-US")
$cultureEU = [CultureInfo]::CreateSpecificCulture("en-GB")
$maxDays = 2 # Max. allowed difference between current date and former date in days
for( $i = 0; $i -lt $dates.Count; $i++ ) {
$currentDate = [DateTime]::Parse( $dates[ $i ],$cultureEU )
if( $i -gt 0 ) {
$diffPast = New-TimeSpan -Start $lastDate -End $currentDate
}
else {
$diffPast = New-TimeSpan -Start $currentDate -End $currentDate
}
if( $diffPast.Days -gt $maxDays ) {
# check if month of current date is day of last date => culture issue
if( $currentDate.Day -eq $lastDate.Month -or $currentDate.Month -eq $lastDate.Day ) {
$currentDate = [DateTime]::Parse( $dates[ $i ],$cultureUS )
}
}
$currentDate
$lastDate = $currentDate
}
Unfortunately, not all the AM/PM indicate American date formats.
Without additional information, you cannot solve your problem, because of inherent ambiguities:
9/11/2007 10:16:27 AM
It is impossible to tell whether this is an en-US (US) timestamp that refers to the 11th day of September (month first), or a en-GB (UK) timestamp that refers to 9th day of November (day first).
Only if either the first or the second component happens to be 13 or higher is en-US or en-GB implied, and only such timestamps would be handled correctly by the try / catch logic in your question.
If you provide an additional constraint that all dates must meet, a solution is possible.
For instance, if you know that all dates fall into a given month:
# The month that all log entries are expected to fall into:
$refMonth = 9 # September, for example.
# Create an array of the cultures to use for parsing:
[cultureinfo[]] $cultures = 'en-GB', 'en-US'
'11/9/2007 17:02:15',
'9/11/2007 05:02:44 PM',
'11/9/2007 05:03:01 PM' | ForEach-Object {
$ok = $false; [datetime] $dt = 0
foreach ($culture in $cultures) {
$ok = [datetime]::TryParse($_, $culture, 'None', [ref] $dt) -and $dt.Month -eq $refMonth
if ($ok) { break }
}
if (-not $ok) { Write-Error "Not recognized as a date in the expected month: $_" }
else { $date } # Output the resulting date.
}
The above yields the following, showing that all dates were parsed as month 9 (September) dates:
Tuesday, September 11, 2007 5:02:15 PM
Tuesday, September 11, 2007 5:02:44 PM
Tuesday, September 11, 2007 5:03:01 PM

Powershell parsing date from log

I'm trying to parse a log file to extract the date from the log file entry. I am able to find the line, but my parsing appears to not be converting the date.
$SBError = "DbConnection"
$SBWebPath = "E:\Temp\server.log"
$result = Get-Content $SBWebPath | Select-String $SBError -casesensitive | Select -last 1 | Out-String
$result | Select-String '####<(\S+ \S+, \S+ \S+ \S+) \S+>' | ForEach-Object {
$DBdateTime = $_.Matches[0].Groups[1].Value -as [DateTime]
}
Write-Output $result
Write-Output $DBdateTime
server.log file contents:
####<Dec 9, 2018 2:59:08,082 AM EST> <Info> <HTTP> Data flowing fine.
####<Dec 9, 2018 2:59:08,085 AM EST> <Warning> <HTTP> framework.db.DbConnection.
Output from script:
####<Dec 9, 2018 2:59:08,085 AM EST> <Warning> <HTTP> framework.db.DbConnection.
Variable from $DBdateTime is not populating, I suspect due to incorrect or invalid parsing and/or inclusion of milliseconds in the log date.
I don't care about the milliseconds, only the Month day year hour minutes seconds and the AM/PM tag. Also don't care about EST but need to keep in mind that when server changes to EDT this value would exist in place of EST.
Any assistance is appreciated.
You're getting an empty value for $DBDateTime because PowerShell doesn't recognize the value of your captured group as a valid DateTime, so the string cannot be cast to that type. You need to actually parse it.
$culture = [Globalization.CultureInfo]::InvariantCulture
$pattern = 'MMM d, yyyy h:mm:ss,fff tt'
$DBDateTime = [DateTime]::ParseExact($_.Matches[0].Groups[1].Value, $pattern, $culture)
See here and here for valid format strings.

Select string not to display file path/name

My select string looks like:
$prevdate = Get-Content "C:\Prevday.txt"
Select-String -Path "C:\latestdatetime.txt" -Pattern "$prevdate" | Measure-Latest | Out-File "C:\Prevday_snap.txt"
But the output which I am getting displayed is
C:\latestdatetime.txt:1:8/17/2015 9:18:45 AM
I don't want the part which has been styled as Bold. How can I get this done.?
Select-String returns MatchInfo objects. The text of the matched line will be in the Line property of those objects.
Select-String -Path "C:\latestdatetime.txt" -Pattern "$prevdate" | Select -ExpandProperty Line
I am not sure I understand the question clearly but it sounds like you would like the value 'part' of select-string result, and not where it is found. If so, you need to go into the properties of the match object you get from select-string. For example:
PS C:\Users\Adil>
gc C:\Temp\a.txt
$date = "10:34:31 AM"
select-string -path C:\temp\a.txt -Pattern $date | % {$_.matches.groups.value}
Tuesday, August 18, 2015 10:32:58 AM
Tuesday, August 17, 2015 10:34:31 AM
Tuesday, August 16, 2015 10:34:32 AM
Tuesday, August 18, 2015 10:34:31 PM
Tuesday, August 18, 2015 11:34:31 AM
Tuesday, August 18, 2015 12:34:31 AM
Tuesday, August 18, 2015 13:34:31 AM
10:34:31 AM

PowerShell: Comparing dates

I am querying a data source for dates. Depending on the item I am searching for, it may have more than date associated with it.
get-date ($Output | Select-Object -ExpandProperty "Date")
An example of the output looks like:
Monday, April 08, 2013 12:00:00 AM
Friday, April 08, 2011 12:00:00 AM
I would like to compare these dates and return which one is set further out into the future.
As Get-Date returns a DateTime object you are able to compare them directly. An example:
(get-date 2010-01-02) -lt (get-date 2010-01-01)
will return false.
I wanted to show how powerful it can be aside from just checking "-lt".
Example: I used it to calculate time differences take from Windows event view Application log:
Get the difference between the two date times:
PS> $Obj = ((get-date "10/22/2020 12:51:1") - (get-date "10/22/2020 12:20:1 "))
Object created:
PS> $Obj
Days : 0
Hours : 0
Minutes : 31
Seconds : 0
Milliseconds : 0
Ticks : 18600000000
TotalDays : 0.0215277777777778
TotalHours : 0.516666666666667
TotalMinutes : 31
TotalSeconds : 1860
TotalMilliseconds : 1860000
Access an item directly:
PS> $Obj.Minutes
31
Late but more complete answer in point of getting the most advanced date from $Output
## Q:\test\2011\02\SO_5097125.ps1
## simulate object input with a here string
$Output = #"
"Date"
"Monday, April 08, 2013 12:00:00 AM"
"Friday, April 08, 2011 12:00:00 AM"
"# -split '\r?\n' | ConvertFrom-Csv
## use Get-Date and calculated property in a pipeline
$Output | Select-Object #{n='Date';e={Get-Date $_.Date}} |
Sort-Object Date | Select-Object -Last 1 -Expand Date
## use Get-Date in a ForEach-Object
$Output.Date | ForEach-Object{Get-Date $_} |
Sort-Object | Select-Object -Last 1
## use [datetime]::ParseExact
## the following will only work if your locale is English for day, month day abbrev.
$Output.Date | ForEach-Object{
[datetime]::ParseExact($_,'dddd, MMMM dd, yyyy hh:mm:ss tt',$Null)
} | Sort-Object | Select-Object -Last 1
## for non English locales
$Output.Date | ForEach-Object{
[datetime]::ParseExact($_,'dddd, MMMM dd, yyyy hh:mm:ss tt',[cultureinfo]::InvariantCulture)
} | Sort-Object | Select-Object -Last 1
## in case the day month abbreviations are in other languages, here German
## simulate object input with a here string
$Output = #"
"Date"
"Montag, April 08, 2013 00:00:00"
"Freidag, April 08, 2011 00:00:00"
"# -split '\r?\n' | ConvertFrom-Csv
$CIDE = New-Object System.Globalization.CultureInfo("de-DE")
$Output.Date | ForEach-Object{
[datetime]::ParseExact($_,'dddd, MMMM dd, yyyy HH:mm:ss',$CIDE)
} | Sort-Object | Select-Object -Last 1
Considering you want to include time also, I have included sample. I am putting datetime in the ISO8601, so it works in locale agnostic manner.
Monday, April 08, 2013 12:00:00 AM
Friday, April 08, 2011 12:00:00 AM
(Get-date "2013-04-08T00:00:00") -lt (Get-Date "2011-04-08T00:00:00")
False