I am writing a PowerShell script to create several directories if they do not exist.
The filesystem looks similar to this
D:\
D:\TopDirec\SubDirec\Project1\Revision1\Reports\
D:\TopDirec\SubDirec\Project2\Revision1\
D:\TopDirec\SubDirec\Project3\Revision1\
Each project folder has multiple revisions.
Each revision folder needs a Reports folder.
Some of the "revisions" folders already contain a Reports folder; however, most do not.
I need to write a script that runs daily to create these folders for each directory.
I am able to write the script to create a folder, but creating several folders is problematic.
Try the -Force parameter:
New-Item -ItemType Directory -Force -Path C:\Path\That\May\Or\May\Not\Exist
You can use Test-Path -PathType Container to check first.
See the New-Item MSDN help article for more details.
$path = "C:\temp\NewFolder"
If(!(test-path -PathType container $path))
{
New-Item -ItemType Directory -Path $path
}
Test-Path -PathType container checks to see if the path exists and is a directory. When it does not, it will create a new directory. If the path exists but is a file, New-Item will raise an error (you can overwrite the file by using the -force argument if you are risky).
[System.IO.Directory]::CreateDirectory('full path to directory')
This internally checks for directory existence, and creates one, if there is no directory. Just one line and native .NET method working perfectly.
Use:
$path = "C:\temp\"
If (!(test-path $path))
{
md $path
}
The first line creates a variable named $path and assigns it the string value of "C:\temp"
The second line is an If statement which relies on the Test-Path cmdlet to check if the variable $path does not exist. The not exists is qualified using the ! symbol.
Third line: If the path stored in the string above is not found, the code between the curly brackets will be run.
md is the short version of typing out: New-Item -ItemType Directory -Path $path
Note: I have not tested using the -Force parameter with the below to see if there is undesirable behavior if the path already exists.
New-Item -ItemType Directory -Path $path
The following code snippet helps you to create a complete path.
Function GenerateFolder($path) {
$global:foldPath = $null
foreach($foldername in $path.split("\")) {
$global:foldPath += ($foldername+"\")
if (!(Test-Path $global:foldPath)){
New-Item -ItemType Directory -Path $global:foldPath
# Write-Host "$global:foldPath Folder Created Successfully"
}
}
}
The above function split the path you passed to the function and will check each folder whether it exists or not. If it does not exist it will create the respective folder until the target/final folder created.
To call the function, use below statement:
GenerateFolder "H:\Desktop\Nithesh\SrcFolder"
I had the exact same problem. You can use something like this:
$local = Get-Location;
$final_local = "C:\Processing";
if(!$local.Equals("C:\"))
{
cd "C:\";
if((Test-Path $final_local) -eq 0)
{
mkdir $final_local;
cd $final_local;
liga;
}
## If path already exists
## DB Connect
elseif ((Test-Path $final_local) -eq 1)
{
cd $final_local;
echo $final_local;
liga; (function created by you TODO something)
}
}
When you specify the -Force flag, PowerShell will not complain if the folder already exists.
One-liner:
Get-ChildItem D:\TopDirec\SubDirec\Project* | `
%{ Get-ChildItem $_.FullName -Filter Revision* } | `
%{ New-Item -ItemType Directory -Force -Path (Join-Path $_.FullName "Reports") }
BTW, for scheduling the task please check out this link: Scheduling Background Jobs.
There are three ways I know to create a directory using PowerShell:
Method 1: PS C:\> New-Item -ItemType Directory -path "C:\livingston"
Method 2: PS C:\> [system.io.directory]::CreateDirectory("C:\livingston")
Method 3: PS C:\> md "C:\livingston"
From your situation it sounds like you need to create a "Revision#" folder once a day with a "Reports" folder in there. If that's the case, you just need to know what the next revision number is. Write a function that gets the next revision number, Get-NextRevisionNumber. Or you could do something like this:
foreach($Project in (Get-ChildItem "D:\TopDirec" -Directory)){
# Select all the Revision folders from the project folder.
$Revisions = Get-ChildItem "$($Project.Fullname)\Revision*" -Directory
# The next revision number is just going to be one more than the highest number.
# You need to cast the string in the first pipeline to an int so Sort-Object works.
# If you sort it descending the first number will be the biggest so you select that one.
# Once you have the highest revision number you just add one to it.
$NextRevision = ($Revisions.Name | Foreach-Object {[int]$_.Replace('Revision','')} | Sort-Object -Descending | Select-Object -First 1)+1
# Now in this we kill two birds with one stone.
# It will create the "Reports" folder but it also creates "Revision#" folder too.
New-Item -Path "$($Project.Fullname)\Revision$NextRevision\Reports" -Type Directory
# Move on to the next project folder.
# This untested example loop requires PowerShell version 3.0.
}
PowerShell 3.0 installation.
Here's a simple one that worked for me. It checks whether the path exists, and if it doesn't, it will create not only the root path, but all sub-directories also:
$rptpath = "C:\temp\reports\exchange"
if (!(test-path -path $rptpath)) {new-item -path $rptpath -itemtype directory}
I wanted to be able to easily let users create a default profile for PowerShell to override some settings, and ended up with the following one-liner (multiple statements yes, but can be pasted into PowerShell and executed at once, which was the main goal):
cls; [string]$filePath = $profile; [string]$fileContents = '<our standard settings>'; if(!(Test-Path $filePath)){md -Force ([System.IO.Path]::GetDirectoryName($filePath)) | Out-Null; $fileContents | sc $filePath; Write-Host 'File created!'; } else { Write-Warning 'File already exists!' };
For readability, here's how I would do it in a .ps1 file instead:
cls; # Clear console to better notice the results
[string]$filePath = $profile; # Declared as string, to allow the use of texts without plings and still not fail.
[string]$fileContents = '<our standard settings>'; # Statements can now be written on individual lines, instead of semicolon separated.
if(!(Test-Path $filePath)) {
New-Item -Force ([System.IO.Path]::GetDirectoryName($filePath)) | Out-Null; # Ignore output of creating directory
$fileContents | Set-Content $filePath; # Creates a new file with the input
Write-Host 'File created!';
}
else {
Write-Warning "File already exists! To remove the file, run the command: Remove-Item $filePath";
};
$mWarningColor = 'Red'
<#
.SYNOPSIS
Creates a new directory.
.DESCRIPTION
Creates a new directory. If the directory already exists, the directory will
not be overwritten. Instead a warning message that the directory already
exists will be output.
.OUTPUT
If the directory already exists, the directory will not be overwritten.
Instead a warning message that the directory already exists will be output.
.EXAMPLE
Sal-New-Directory -DirectoryPath '.\output'
#>
function Sal-New-Directory {
param(
[parameter(mandatory=$true)]
[String]
$DirectoryPath
)
$ErrorActionPreference = "Stop"
try {
if (!(Test-Path -Path $DirectoryPath -PathType Container)) {
# Sal-New-Directory is not designed to take multiple
# directories. However, we use foreach to supress the native output
# and substitute with a custom message.
New-Item -Path $DirectoryPath -ItemType Container | `
foreach {'Created ' + $_.FullName}
} else {
Write-Host "$DirectoryPath already exists and" `
"so will not be (re)created." `
-ForegroundColor $mWarningColor
}
} finally {
$ErrorActionPreference = "Continue"
}
}
"Sal" is just an arbitrary prefix for my own library. You could remove it or replace it with your own.
Another example (place here because it otherwise ruins stackoverflow syntax highlighting):
Sal-New-Directory -DirectoryPath ($mCARootDir + "private\")
Example, create a 'Reports' folder inside of the script's folder.
$ReportsDir = $PSScriptRoot + '\Reports'
$CreateReportsDir = [System.IO.Directory]::CreateDirectory($ReportsDir)
Related
I am having a strange problem in Powershell (Version 2021.8.0) while creating folders and naming them. I start with a number of individual ebook files in a folder that I set using Set-Location. I use the file name minus the extension to create a new folder with the same name as the e-book file. The code works fine the majority of the time with various file extensions I have stored in an array beginning of the code.
What's happening is that the code creates the proper folder name the majority of the time and moves the source file into the folder after it's created.
The problem is, if the last letter of the source file name, on files with the extension ".epub" end in an "e", then the "e" is missing from the end of the created folder name. I thought that I saw it also drop "r" and "p" but I have been unable to replicate that error recently.
Below is my code. It is set up to run against file extensions for e-books and audiobooks. Please ignore the error messages that are being generated when files of a specific type don't exist in the working folder. I am just using the array for testing and it will be filled automatically later by reading the folder contents.
This Code Creates a Folder for Each File and moves the file into that Folder:
Clear-Host
$SourceFileFolder = 'N:\- Books\- - BMS\- Books Needing Folders'
Set-Location $SourceFileFolder
$MyArray = ( "*.azw3", "*.cbz", "*.doc", "*.docx", "*.djvu", "*.epub", "*.mobi", "*.mp3", "*.pdf", "*.txt" )
Foreach ($FileExtension in $MyArray) {
Get-ChildItem -Include $FileExtension -Name -Recurse | Sort-Object | ForEach-Object { $SourceFileName = $_
$NewDirectoryName = $SourceFileName.TrimEnd($FileExtension)
New-Item -Name $NewDirectoryName -ItemType "directory"
$OriginalFileName = Join-Path -Path $SourceFileFolder -ChildPath $SourceFileName
$DestinationFilename = Join-Path -Path $NewDirectoryName -ChildPath $SourceFileName
$DestinationFilename = Join-Path -Path $SourceFileFolder -ChildPath $DestinationFilename
Move-Item $OriginalFileName -Destination $DestinationFilename
}
}
Thanks for any help you can give. Driving me nuts and I am pretty sure it's something that I am doing wrong, like always.
String.TrimEnd()
Removes all the trailing occurrences of a set of characters specified in an array from the current string.
TrimEnd method will remove all characters that matches in the character array you provided. It does not look for whether or not .epub is at the end of the string, but rather it trims out any of the characters in the argument supplied from the end of the string. In your case, all dots,e,p,u,b will be removed from the end until no more of these characters are within the string. Now, you will eventually (and you do) remove more than what you intended for.
I'd suggest using EndsWith to match your extensions and performing a substring selection instead, as below. If you deal only with single extension (eg: not with .tar.gz or other double extensions type), you can also use the .net [System.IO.Path]::GetFileNameWithoutExtension($MyFileName) method.
$MyFileName = "Teste.epub"
$FileExt = '.epub'
# Wrong approach
$output = $MyFileName.TrimEnd($FileExt)
write-host $output -ForegroundColor Yellow
#Output returns Test
# Proper method
if ($MyFileName.EndsWith($FileExt)) {
$output = $MyFileName.Substring(0,$MyFileName.Length - $FileExt.Length)
Write-Host $output -ForegroundColor Cyan
}
# Returns Tested
#Alternative method. Won't work if you want to trim out double extensions (eg. tar.gz)
if ($MyFileName.EndsWith($FileExt)) {
$Output = [System.IO.Path]::GetFileNameWithoutExtension($MyFileName)
Write-Host $output -ForegroundColor Cyan
}
You're making this too hard on yourself. Use the .BaseName to get the filename without extension.
Your code simplified:
$SourceFileFolder = 'N:\- Books\- - BMS\- Books Needing Folders'
$MyArray = "*.azw3", "*.cbz", "*.doc", "*.docx", "*.djvu", "*.epub", "*.mobi", "*.mp3", "*.pdf", "*.txt"
(Get-ChildItem -Path $SourceFileFolder -Include $MyArray -File -Recurse) | Sort-Object Name | ForEach-Object {
# BaseName is the filename without extension
$NewDirectory = Join-Path -Path $SourceFileFolder -ChildPath $_.BaseName
$null = New-Item -Path $NewDirectory -ItemType Directory -Force
$_ | Move-Item -Destination $NewDirectory
}
So i wrote the code below
$datum_vandaag = $(Get-Date).toString('yyyy-MM-dd')
$maand = $datum_vandaag.substring(5, 2)
if (-Not (Test-Path -Path "C:\Users\Nick\Desktop\ITIL\**" -Include *$maand*)) { #(contains words gelijk aan (get-date)
md -Path "C:\Users\Nick\Desktop\ITIL\[??????]\$datum_vandaag" # Makes folder with name of current date in path:
}
Else{Write-Output "test output"
}
The IF function is looking if in the path Desktop\ITIL** there is a folder that has the same number as the current date (07 is july) somewhere in the name of the folder.
Now i would like to make a new folder in the folder that is found by the command below :
Test-Path -Path "C:\Users\Nick\Desktop\ITIL\**" -Include *$maand*
How could i get acces to this path so i can use it in the md command (now marked with [??????] in the code) Because currently i only receive if a folder is found, false or true.
All i could find what possibly would work is get-path or resolve-path but I don't know how to implement this.
It's difficult to fully understand what you are asking, but I think the command you are looking for is Get-Item which will return an object to the named folder.
Something like this might work:
$path = Get-Item -Path "C:\Users\Nick\Desktop\ITIL\**" -Include *$maand*
if ($path) {
$newPath = Join-Path -Path $path -ChildPath $datum_vandaag
New-Item -Path $newPath -ItemType Directory
}
I have set some variables in PowerShell. The variables are created at the beginning of my script. However, the values for the variables are being executed at start which in turns gives and error message. Ex:
$checker = get-item -path C:\users\user\desktop\Foldername
$finder = Test-path -Path $checker
if($finder -eq $finder )
{
}
Else
{
Create-Item -Path C:/users/user/desktop -name "Foldername" -itemtype Directory
}
I do know that if I run this it will give me an error because the directory never existed and I can just change the variable order to avoid errors.
My question is that this script is going to be more lines of code than this and I would have to create the variable right when its needed to avoid errors.
How can I use these variables like a regular programming language where the variables are ignored until called upon.
Using Get-Item and checking with Test-Path afterwards is not a good design. Two better ways:
Use Get-Item only and check for $null to check for its existence:
$checker = Get-Item -Path C:\users\user\desktop\Foldername -ErrorAction SilentlyContinue
if ($checker) {
# do something with the existing folder
} else {
Create-Item -Path C:/users/user/desktop -Name "Foldername" -ItemType Directory
}
Use Test-Path only to check for its existence:
if (Test-Path -Path C:\users\user\desktop\Foldername) {
# do something with the existing folder
} else {
Create-Item -Path C:/users/user/desktop -Name "Foldername" -ItemType Directory
}
I am trying to write a PowerShell script to do the following.
Rename files in source (FTP folders) directories with it's "current_name_datetime.csv" as per a source file "Source_list.csv" this file has the directories "source,destination" I want this script to look into.
Copy newly renamed files to backup directories as per destination in Source_list.csv this file has the directories "source,destination" I want this script to look into.
Move newly renamed files to final destination directory which is not in my current script.
Source_list.csv contents
cscenter,Costume_Supercenter
fkimports,FKImports
My Script:
$sdfiles = Get-Content c:\!tony\Source_list.csv
$sourceDir = "c:\test\"
$destinationDir = "c:\testing\"
Get-ChildItem $sourceDir -Recurse -Include $sdfiles "*.csv"|
ForEach-Object{
$newname= "{0}{1}_{2}.csv" -f $destinationDir, $_.BaseName, [datetime]::Now.ToString('MM-dd-yyyy-hh-mm-ss')
$_|Copy-Item -Include ,$sdfiles -Destination $newname -whatif }
Error:
What if: Performing operation "Copy Directory" on Target "Item: C:\test\cscenter Destination: C:\testing\cscenter_10-01-2015-12-22-24.csv".
I see in the error that it is trying to copy the directory not the single file in each directory and creating a new folder using the original folder name and renaming the folder and appending the date/time stamp.
Confused. The -Include parameter should only be accepting a single array of strings, throwing "*.csv" on to the end of it won't work AFAIK. Additionally It will be interpreting the whole line of the CSV, ie searching for the file "cscenter,Costume_Supercenter" so shouldn't be returning anything. At least that's what I see when I replicate this on my computer.
Lastly you've tried to filter the files, piped that to Copy-Item and tried to filter it again?
I'd take a more straightforward approach:
$sdfiles = Import-CSV c:\!tony\Source_list.csv -Header #("File", "Folder")
$sourcedir = "c:\test\"
$destinationdir = "c:\testing\"
$sdfiles | ForEach-Object {
$path = $sourcedir + $_.File + ".csv"
$folder = $destinationdir + $_.Folder + '\'
if (!(Test-Path $folder)) { New-Item -Type Directory -Path $folder }
if (Test-Path ($path))
{
$newname = "{0}{1}_{2}.csv" -f $folder, $_.File, (Get-Date).ToString('MM-dd-yyyy-hh-mm-ss')
Copy-Item -Path $path -Destination $newname -whatif
}
else { Write-Error "File $($_.File) not found" }
}
It's a bit chunkier but much easier to read and tweak to your liking. Note that Import-CSV does require PowerShell v3. Let me know if you've got v2 and need help tweaking it for a two-dimensional array.
I also recommend looking into Microsoft's MVA courses on PowerShell, they are excellent resources for starting out.
I am still very new and I have for example one script to backup some folders by zipping and copying them to a newly created folder.
Now I want to know if the zip and copy process was successful, by successful i mean if my computer zipped and copied it. I don't want to check the content, so I assume that my script took the right folders and zipped them.
Here is my script :
$backupversion = "1.65"
# declare variables for zip
$folder = "C:\com\services" , "C:\com\www"
$destPath = "C:\com\backup\$backupversion\"
# Create Folder for the zipped services
New-Item -ItemType directory -Path "$destPath"
#Define zip function
function create-7zip{
param([String] $folder,
[String] $destinationFilePath)
write-host $folder $destinationFilePath
[string]$pathToZipExe = "C:\Program Files (x86)\7-Zip\7zG.exe";
[Array]$arguments = "a", "-tzip", "$destinationFilePath", "$folder";
& $pathToZipExe $arguments;
}
Get-ChildItem $folder | ? { $_.PSIsContainer} | % {
write-host $_.BaseName $_.Name;
$dest= [System.String]::Concat($destPath,$_.Name,".zip");
(create-7zip $_.FullName $dest)
}
Now I can either check if in the parentfolder is a newly created folder by time.
Or i can check if there are zip folders in my subfolders I created.
What way would you suggest? I probably just know this ways, but there are a million way to do this.
Whats your idea? The only rule is , that powershell should be used.
thanks in advance
You could try using the Try and Catch method by wrapping the (create-7zip $_.FullName $dest) with a try and then catch any errors:
Try{ (create-7zip $_.FullName $dest) }
Catch{ Write-Host $error[0] }
This will Try the function create-7zip and write any the errors that many accrue to the shell.
One thing that can be tried is checking the $? variable for the status of the command.
$? stores the status of the last command run,
So for
create-7zip $_.FullName $dest
If you then echo out $? you will see either true or false.
Another option is the $error variable
You can also combine these in all sorts of ways (Or with the exception handling).
For example, run your command
foreach-object {
create-7zip $_.FullName $dest
if (!$?) {"$_.FullName $ErrorVariable" | out-file Errors.txt}
}
That script is more pseudocode for ideas than working code, but it should at least get you close to using it!