Passing an associative array from c# to Powershell - Stack Overflow most recent 30 from stackoverflow.com 2009-12-06T22:54:36Z http://stackoverflow.com/feeds/question/619649 http://www.creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.5/rdf http://stackoverflow.com/questions/619649/passing-an-associative-array-from-c-to-powershell 6 Passing an associative array from c# to Powershell xcud 2009-03-06T17:14:23Z 2009-03-06T19:45:36Z <p>I'd like to pass an associative array from C# to Powershell. As an example I'd like to execute this powershell line of code:</p> <pre><code> PS C:\> get-command | select name, @{N="Foo";E={"Bar"}} -first 3 Name Foo ---- --- Add-Content Bar Add-History Bar Add-Member Bar </code></pre> <p>I'd like to do this via a Pipeline of <strong>distinct</strong> Commands as opposed to a single command marked as a script. Here's the code:</p> <pre><code> Runspace runspace = RunspaceFactory.CreateRunspace(); runspace.Open(); Pipeline pipeline = runspace.CreatePipeline(); pipeline.Commands.Add("get-command"); Command c = new Command("select-object"); List properties = new List(); properties.Add("name"); properties.Add("@{N=\"Foo\";E={\"Bar\"}}"); c.Parameters.Add("Property", properties.ToArray()); c.Parameters.Add("First", 3); pipeline.Commands.Add(c); pipeline.Commands.Add("Out-String"); Collection retval = pipeline.Invoke(); runspace.Close(); StringBuilder stringBuilder = new StringBuilder(); foreach (PSObject obj in retval) Console.WriteLine(obj.ToString()); </code></pre> <p>But that associative array being passed in as a parameter to Select-Object isn't being parsed correctly. This is what comes out the other side:</p> <pre><code> PS C:\test> c:\test\Bin\Debug\test.exe Name @{N="Foo";E={"Bar"}} ---- -------------------- Add-Content Add-History Add-Member </code></pre> <p>What's wrong with how I'm setting up the Select-Object command parameters?</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/619649/passing-an-associative-array-from-c-to-powershell/620019#620019 0 Answer by xcud for Passing an associative array from c# to Powershell xcud 2009-03-06T19:00:43Z 2009-03-06T19:00:43Z <p>I found an ugly solution. In the code above replace this line</p> <pre><code>properties.Add("@{N=\"Foo\";E={\"Bar\"}}");</code></pre> <p>with this block</p> <pre><code>Dictionary&lt;string, object&gt; ht = new Dictionary&lt;string, object&gt;(); ht.Add("N", "Foo"); RunspaceInvoke invoke = new RunspaceInvoke(); ScriptBlock scriptblock = invoke.Invoke("{\"Bar\"}")[0].BaseObject as ScriptBlock; ht.Add("E", scriptblock); properties.Add(ht); </code></pre> <p>Please submit something cleaner or more correct than this. </p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/619649/passing-an-associative-array-from-c-to-powershell/620165#620165 8 Answer by x0n for Passing an associative array from c# to Powershell x0n 2009-03-06T19:45:36Z 2009-03-06T19:45:36Z <p>Creating a pipeline through c# and creating a pipeline with native powershell script have one major difference that is actually quite subtle: the parameter binder.</p> <p>if I write a version of your code in pure script, I will get the same error: the hashtable literal is treated as a string value.</p> <pre><code>ps&gt; $ps = $ps.Commands.Add("get-process") ps&gt; $ps = $ps.Commands.Add("select-object") ps&gt; $ps.Commands[1].Parameters.Add("Property", @("Name", '@{N="Foo";E={"Bar"}}')) </code></pre> <p>In this case, the command receives an array of two strings, the "name" and the hashtable literal string. This will be broken in exactly the same way as your C#. Now, take a look at the right way to do it (in script) - let me rewrite line 3:</p> <pre><code>ps&gt; $ps.Commands[1].Parameters.Add("Property", @("Name", @{N="Foo";E={"Bar"}})) </code></pre> <p>So what changed? I removed the quotes around the hashtable -- I am passing a hashtable as the 2nd element of the object array! So, to get your C# example to work, you need to do what the parameter binder does for us at the command line (which is quite a lot!). Replace:</p> <pre><code>properties.Add("@{N=\"Foo\";E={\"Bar\"}}"); </code></pre> <p>with</p> <pre><code>properties.Add( new Hashtable { {"N", "Foo"}, {"E", System.Mananagement.Automation.ScriptBlock.Create("\"Foo\"")} } ); </code></pre> <p>I hope this clears it up for you. The parameter binder is probably the least visible but most powerful part of the powershell experience.</p> <p>-Oisin</p>