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OS: Windows XP, Windows 7 64bit.

We have some fairly hefty cmd scripts that are used for some daily build processes. These scripts spawn numerous other (windowed) processes. There is one controlling cmd script, a small simple script, which starts the main cmd script. The purpose of the small controlling script is to clean up in situations where the main script or any of its children fail. This is accomplished fairly easily: the main script and all its children have window titles which begin with a unique identifier. When the controlling script determines that the main script and all its children should have completed, it uses tasklist to find windows of any hung processes, via:

tasklist.exe /FI "WINDOWTITLE eq UniqueIdentifier*"

This all worked very nicely in XP. Now enter Windows7 64-bit. Here, if the main .cmd script or any other .cmd shell window attempts to sets its window title via

title UniqueIdentifier Followed By Descriptive Text

Windows7 64-bit kindly prepends other text to the title (specifically, "Administrator: " or similar). The prepended text cannot be relied upon. So now we want to use

tasklist.exe /FI "WINDOWTITLE eq *UniqueIdentifier*"

but THIS FAILS with the error message "The search filter cannot be recognized". Going the route of using our UniqueIdentifier as a post-fix does not work: the command

tasklist.exe /FI "WINDOWTITLE eq *UniqueIdentifier"

also results in the same error message. It seems that Microsoft's notion of "wildcard" in a filter does not extend beyond having a "*" as the terminal character. Ouch.

DOES ANYONE HAVE ANY WORK-AROUNDS? Pslist does not seem to allow filtering with window title.

5 Answers 5

39

You can use the /V option to include the window title in the output and then pipe the result to FIND (or FINDSTR) to filter the result.

tasklist /v | find "UniqueIdentifier"
tasklist /v | findstr /c:"UniqueIdentifier"

If using FINDSTR then I recommend using the /C option so that you can include spaces in the search string.

You might want to use the /I option if you need to do a case insensitive search.

4
  • 1
    Yes, that will work, thanks (I'll likely use grep instead of find or findstr as then I can use a regexp). However, what I didn't say was that the next step is to use taskkill to kill the offending tasks, and here I have the same problem. As an ugly work around, I can parse the output from tasklist /v | grep ... and then feed back into taskkill, but that is very ugly. I was hoping for some undocumented "this is how you get the filter to work properly". Sigh. But thanks, your idea will work. Aug 1, 2012 at 14:47
  • FINDSTR has limited regex support, but grep is much more powerful and more reliable.
    – dbenham
    Aug 1, 2012 at 14:54
  • Much agreed. Oddly in this case, grep will find the "line" but seems to be dropping most of the start of the line, which renders it useless, so findstr wins out. I wonder if tasklist is putting some weird characters in the middle of the line???? (BTW, in my previous comment, "how you get the filter to work" was refering to /FI filtering in tasklist - filtering with grep or findstr is trivial.) Aug 1, 2012 at 16:52
  • It is not "grep" that drops info. tasklist spews odd characters to stderr. Piping 2>nul as in (tasklist -v 2>nul)|grep ... works fine. Thanks to wmz for that observation in another question. Aug 2, 2012 at 2:03
8

Yes, it works fine if the * is at the end of the process name searched for,
as pointed out in the answer below.
Here is an example of how to run the command :

tasklist /FI "IMAGENAME eq no*"
0
6

Based on my experimentation, the wildcard for taskkill only seems to work at the end of a string, not in any other position. I can't find any documentation from Microsoft one way or another about this. However all of the examples in the documentation follow this format

Successful:  notepad*
Fails: notepad*.exe
Fails *notepad*

As mentioned in the other answer, best to parse the output of tasklist to get exactly what you want rather than relying on the rather broken behavior of taskkill.

0

I think this works on Windows 10. Here's my snippet

set PROCNAME="Foobar"
tasklist /FI "IMAGENAME eq %PROCNAME%*" 2>NUL | find /I /N %PROCNAME%>NUL
if "%ERRORLEVEL%"=="0" (
    echo it is running
)

Notice the asterisk in the filter.

0

Use powershell. Get-Process. way more useful if you can handle the power that is. Try

get-process | where MainWindowTitle -like "*UniqueIdentifier*" | select *

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