112

I'm trying to run a program from PowerShell, wait for the exit, then get access to the ExitCode, but I am not having much luck. I don't want to use -Wait with Start-Process, as I need some processing to carry on in the background.

Here's a simplified test script:

cd "C:\Windows"

# ExitCode is available when using -Wait...
Write-Host "Starting Notepad with -Wait - return code will be available"
$process = (Start-Process -FilePath "notepad.exe" -PassThru -Wait)
Write-Host "Process finished with return code: " $process.ExitCode

# ExitCode is not available when waiting separately
Write-Host "Starting Notepad without -Wait - return code will NOT be available"
$process = (Start-Process -FilePath "notepad.exe" -PassThru)
$process.WaitForExit()
Write-Host "Process exit code should be here: " $process.ExitCode

Running this script will cause Notepad to be started. After this is closed manually, the exit code will be printed, and it will start again, without using -wait. No ExitCode is provided when this is quit:

Starting Notepad with -Wait - return code will be available
Process finished with return code:  0
Starting Notepad without -Wait - return code will NOT be available
Process exit code should be here:

I need to be able to perform additional processing between starting the program and waiting for it to quit, so I can't make use of -Wait. How can I do this and still have access to the .ExitCode property from this process?

1
  • Perfect! works as explained and demonstrates the implementation Jun 28, 2023 at 8:45

6 Answers 6

152

There are two things to remember here. One is to add the -PassThru argument and two is to add the -Wait argument. You need to add the wait argument because of this defect.

-PassThru [<SwitchParameter>]
    Returns a process object for each process that the cmdlet started. By default,
    this cmdlet does not generate any output.

Once you do this a process object is passed back and you can look at the ExitCode property of that object. Here is an example:

$process = start-process ping.exe -windowstyle Hidden -ArgumentList "-n 1 -w 127.0.0.1" -PassThru -Wait
$process.ExitCode

# This will print 1

If you run it without -PassThru or -Wait, it will print out nothing.

The same answer is here: How do I run a Windows installer and get a succeed/fail value in PowerShell?

It's also worth noting that there's a workaround mentioned in the "defect report" link above, which is as following:

# Start the process with the -PassThru command to be able to access it later
$process = Start-Process 'ping.exe' -WindowStyle Hidden -ArgumentList '-n 1 -w 127.0.0.1' -PassThru

# This will print out False/True depending on if the process has ended yet or not
# Needs to be called for the command below to work correctly
$process.HasExited

# This will print out the actual exit code of the process
$process.GetType().GetField('exitCode', 'NonPublic, Instance').GetValue($process)
5
  • 3
    Worth noting the workaround: $p.GetType().GetField("exitCode", "NonPublic,Instance").GetValue($p) Jul 11, 2013 at 11:56
  • 2
    The first link is (effectively) broken: "Microsoft Connect Has Been Retired" Nov 6, 2018 at 20:41
  • 1
    One thing to note about using -Wait is that it causes Start-Process to wait for all decedent processes to exit -- not just the one it starts. Often this is not an issue since it's relatively uncommon for a process to create children. But, I ran into this with msbuild.exe that spawns children that don't exit. Can't use -Wait since causes the script to hang.
    – steve
    Jul 22, 2020 at 13:52
  • 1
    The poster specifically says that he cannot use -Wait, so this answer is not useful.
    – Nanki
    Nov 7, 2021 at 11:13
  • $process.GetType().GetField('exitCode', 'NonPublic, Instance').GetValue($process) this method seems to only return the value if .ExitCode already has the value and has been accessed. If I run this for example: $p = Start-Process -FilePath cmd.exe -ArgumentList '/c', 'exit 11' -PassThru -NoNewWindow the GetField method returns 0, while .ExitCode is null. If I immediately access $p.Handle after starting the process, then .GetField... returns 259, but .ExitCode returns 11. If I use .GetField after accessing .ExitCode, then it matches .ExitCode.
    – briantist
    Feb 26 at 2:33
78

While trying out the final suggestion above, I discovered an even simpler solution. All I had to do was cache the process handle. As soon as I did that, $process.ExitCode worked correctly. If I didn't cache the process handle, $process.ExitCode was null.

example:

$proc = Start-Process $msbuild -PassThru
$handle = $proc.Handle # cache proc.Handle
$proc.WaitForExit();

if ($proc.ExitCode -ne 0) {
    Write-Warning "$_ exited with status code $($proc.ExitCode)"
}
4
  • 6
    I would love to know why this works if anyone has any thoughts I'd appreciate them.
    – CarlR
    Jun 21, 2016 at 13:41
  • 16
    @CarlR This is a quirk of the implementation of the .NET Process object. The implementation of the ExitCode property first checks if the process has exited. For some reason, the code that performs that check not only looks at the HasExited property but also verifies that the proces handle is present in the proces object and throws an exception if it is not. PowerShell intercepts that exception and returns null. Feb 11, 2017 at 1:26
  • 11
    (cont.) Accessing the Handle property causes the process object to retrieve the process handle and store it internally. Once the handle is stored in the process object, the ExitCode property works as expected. Feb 11, 2017 at 1:29
  • 6
    that is insane, but as a workaround it does work perfectly. weird! Mar 29, 2018 at 12:47
54

Two things you could do I think...

  1. Create the System.Diagnostics.Process object manually and bypass Start-Process
  2. Run the executable in a background job (only for non-interactive processes!)

Here's how you could do either:

$pinfo = New-Object System.Diagnostics.ProcessStartInfo
$pinfo.FileName = "notepad.exe"
$pinfo.RedirectStandardError = $true
$pinfo.RedirectStandardOutput = $true
$pinfo.UseShellExecute = $false
$pinfo.Arguments = ""
$p = New-Object System.Diagnostics.Process
$p.StartInfo = $pinfo
$p.Start() | Out-Null
#Do Other Stuff Here....
$p.WaitForExit()
$p.ExitCode

OR

Start-Job -Name DoSomething -ScriptBlock {
    & ping.exe somehost
    Write-Output $LASTEXITCODE
}
#Do other stuff here
Get-Job -Name DoSomething | Wait-Job | Receive-Job
3
  • the 1st snippet is more bulletproof and did the trick, even if the process abruptly terminates.
    – Hasan
    Nov 23, 2016 at 17:02
  • How can I get the full Output of the Process started here?
    – r4d1um
    Aug 15, 2017 at 6:53
  • 2
    I had to come here to learn that Start-Process creates an object of type System.Diagnostics.Process. Why don't they include this information in the powershell documentation?
    – birgersp
    Feb 23, 2021 at 12:20
24

The '-Wait' option seemed to block for me even though my process had finished.

I tried Adrian's solution and it works. But I used Wait-Process instead of relying on a side effect of retrieving the process handle.

So:

$proc = Start-Process $msbuild -PassThru
Wait-Process -InputObject $proc

if ($proc.ExitCode -ne 0) {
    Write-Warning "$_ exited with status code $($proc.ExitCode)"
}
3
  • It looks to me using $proc.HasExited is not reliable either. I had several cases where it would intermittently be stuck when waiting for that value to become true when being using in a while-loop. I didn't know about Wait-Process but this appears to do a much better job. Thanks, @blt
    – Manfred
    Jun 28, 2017 at 9:49
  • 3
    This is the best answer! Seems to me that it should also work to use WaitForExit or -Wait, but this answer is the best alternative. So much simpler than using System.Diagnostics.Process.
    – steve
    Jul 22, 2020 at 14:05
  • Using PS 5.1 (because I'm forced to), I have tried many of the above suggestions and @Ben T's is the only one that worked for me, on a consistent basis. At first Adrian's ans seem to work, however, I soon realized the exit code was not getting set properly/consistently. So, agree here...This is the best answer. Oct 27, 2021 at 21:37
5

Or try adding this...

$code = @"
[DllImport("kernel32.dll")]
public static extern int GetExitCodeProcess(IntPtr hProcess, out Int32 exitcode);
"@
$type = Add-Type -MemberDefinition $code -Name "Win32" -Namespace Win32 -PassThru
[Int32]$exitCode = 0
$type::GetExitCodeProcess($process.Handle, [ref]$exitCode)

By using this code, you can still let PowerShell take care of managing redirected output/error streams, which you cannot do using System.Diagnostics.Process.Start() directly.

1
  • 2
    Tip: Cache the process handle ($process.Handle) after starting the process with Start-Process. It won't be set anymore after process exit. Dec 9, 2013 at 12:29
0

Here's a variation on this theme. I want to uninstall Cisco Amp, wait, and get the exit code. But the uninstall program starts a second program called "un_a" and exits. With this code, I can wait for un_a to finish and get the exit code of it, which is 3010 for "needs reboot". This is actually inside a .bat file.

If you've ever wanted to uninstall folding@home, it works in a similar way.

rem uninstall cisco amp, probably needs a reboot after

rem runs Un_A.exe and exits

rem start /wait isn't useful
"c:\program files\Cisco\AMP\6.2.19\uninstall.exe" /S

powershell while (! ($proc = get-process Un_A -ea 0)) { sleep 1 }; $handle = $proc.handle; 'waiting'; wait-process Un_A; exit $proc.exitcode

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