40

Is there any simple way(i.e., script) to watch file in Powershell and run commands if file changes. I have been googling but can't find simple solution. Basically I run script in Powershell and if file changes then Powershell run other commands.

EDIT

Ok I think I made a mistake. I don't need script, a need function that I can include in my $PROFILE.ps1 file. But still, I was trying hard and still I'm unable to write it, so I will give bounty. It have to look like this:

function watch($command, $file) {
  if($file #changed) {
    #run $command
  }
}

There is a NPM module that is doing what I want, watch , but it only watches for folders not files, and it's not Powershell xD.

1
  • I have expanded my answer to include solution specific to your requirements. Is this what you were after? Apr 7, 2015 at 3:16

10 Answers 10

59

Here is an example I have found in my snippets. Hopefully it is a little bit more comprehensive.

First you need to create a file system watcher and subsequently you subscribe to an event that the watcher is generating. This example listens for “Create” events, but could easily be modified to watch out for “Change”.

$folder = "C:\Users\LOCAL_~1\AppData\Local\Temp\3"
$filter = "*.LOG"
$Watcher = New-Object IO.FileSystemWatcher $folder, $filter -Property @{ 
    IncludeSubdirectories = $false
    NotifyFilter = [IO.NotifyFilters]'FileName, LastWrite'
}
$onCreated = Register-ObjectEvent $Watcher -EventName Created -SourceIdentifier FileCreated -Action {
   $path = $Event.SourceEventArgs.FullPath
   $name = $Event.SourceEventArgs.Name
   $changeType = $Event.SourceEventArgs.ChangeType
   $timeStamp = $Event.TimeGenerated
   Write-Host "The file '$name' was $changeType at $timeStamp"
   Write-Host $path
   #Move-Item $path -Destination $destination -Force -Verbose
}

I will try to narrow this down to your requirements.

If you run this as part of your "profile.ps1" script you should read The Power of Profiles which explains the different profile scripts available and more.

Also, you should understand that waiting for a change in a folder can't be run as a function in the script. The profile script has to be finished, for your PowerShell session to start. You can, however use a function to register an event.

What this does, is register a piece of code, to be executed every time an event is triggered. This code will be executed in the context of your current PowerShell host (or shell) while the session remains open. It can interact with the host session, but has no knowledge of the original script that registered the code. The original script has probably finished already, by the time your code is triggered.

Here is the code:

Function Register-Watcher {
    param ($folder)
    $filter = "*.*" #all files
    $watcher = New-Object IO.FileSystemWatcher $folder, $filter -Property @{ 
        IncludeSubdirectories = $false
        EnableRaisingEvents = $true
    }

    $changeAction = [scriptblock]::Create('
        # This is the code which will be executed every time a file change is detected
        $path = $Event.SourceEventArgs.FullPath
        $name = $Event.SourceEventArgs.Name
        $changeType = $Event.SourceEventArgs.ChangeType
        $timeStamp = $Event.TimeGenerated
        Write-Host "The file $name was $changeType at $timeStamp"
    ')

    Register-ObjectEvent $Watcher -EventName "Changed" -Action $changeAction
}

 Register-Watcher "c:\temp"

After running this code, change any file in the "C:\temp" directory (or any other directory you specify). You will see an event triggering execution of your code.

Also, valid FileSystemWatcher events you can register are "Changed", "Created", "Deleted" and "Renamed".

4
  • Hm it is suppose to block the shell while it's running, like every watch function.
    – IGRACH
    Apr 9, 2015 at 22:58
  • Fair enough, I must have misunderstood your question a bit. Maybe you can edit and add that as a requirement. Also, are you waiting for just one change in a file, or multiple? Apr 9, 2015 at 23:09
  • Great answer, @JanChrbolka tiny minor issue, the output is missing a closing " in the string. (SO edits needs to be 6 chars)
    – Crypth
    Jun 8, 2015 at 14:51
  • @jpaugh..is there a way to, in PS, create a watcher or event that does not require an active session? I have used your code to develop a filewatcher that does most of what I am aiming. The last part is for the watcher to work on the server, and if an automated process drops the file into a folder, it works, regardless of whether or not I am connected to the server.
    – cquadrini
    Sep 28, 2020 at 17:29
25

I will add another answer, because my previous one did miss the requirements.

Requirements

  • Write a function to WAIT for a change in a specific file
  • When a change is detected the function will execute a predefined command and return execution to the main script
  • File path and command are passed to the function as parameters

There is already an answer using file hashes. I want to follow my previous answer and show you how this can be accomplish using FileSystemWatcher.

$File = "C:\temp\log.txt"
$Action = 'Write-Output "The watched file was changed"'
$global:FileChanged = $false

function Wait-FileChange {
    param(
        [string]$File,
        [string]$Action
    )
    $FilePath = Split-Path $File -Parent
    $FileName = Split-Path $File -Leaf
    $ScriptBlock = [scriptblock]::Create($Action)

    $Watcher = New-Object IO.FileSystemWatcher $FilePath, $FileName -Property @{ 
        IncludeSubdirectories = $false
        EnableRaisingEvents = $true
    }
    $onChange = Register-ObjectEvent $Watcher Changed -Action {$global:FileChanged = $true}

    while ($global:FileChanged -eq $false){
        Start-Sleep -Milliseconds 100
    }

    & $ScriptBlock 
    Unregister-Event -SubscriptionId $onChange.Id
}

Wait-FileChange -File $File -Action $Action
0
7

Here is the solution I ended up with based on several of the previous answers here. I specifically wanted:

  1. My code to be code, not a string
  2. My code to be run on the I/O thread so I can see the console output
  3. My code to be called every time there was a change, not once

Side note: I've left in the details of what I wanted to run due to the irony of using a global variable to communicate between threads so I can compile Erlang code.

Function RunMyStuff {
    # this is the bit we want to happen when the file changes
    Clear-Host # remove previous console output
    & 'C:\Program Files\erl7.3\bin\erlc.exe' 'program.erl' # compile some erlang
    erl -noshell -s program start -s init stop # run the compiled erlang program:start()
}

Function Watch {    
    $global:FileChanged = $false # dirty... any better suggestions?
    $folder = "M:\dev\Erlang"
    $filter = "*.erl"
    $watcher = New-Object IO.FileSystemWatcher $folder, $filter -Property @{ 
        IncludeSubdirectories = $false 
        EnableRaisingEvents = $true
    }

    Register-ObjectEvent $Watcher "Changed" -Action {$global:FileChanged = $true} > $null

    while ($true){
        while ($global:FileChanged -eq $false){
            # We need this to block the IO thread until there is something to run 
            # so the script doesn't finish. If we call the action directly from 
            # the event it won't be able to write to the console
            Start-Sleep -Milliseconds 100
        }

        # a file has changed, run our stuff on the I/O thread so we can see the output
        RunMyStuff

        # reset and go again
        $global:FileChanged = $false
    }
}

RunMyStuff # run the action at the start so I can see the current output
Watch

You could pass in folder/filter/action into watch if you want something more generic. Hopefully this is a helpful starting point for someone else.

5
  1. Calculate the hash of a list of files
  2. Store it in a dictionary
  3. Check each hash on an interval
  4. Perform action when hash is different

function watch($f, $command, $interval) {
    $sha1 = New-Object System.Security.Cryptography.SHA1CryptoServiceProvider
    $hashfunction = '[System.BitConverter]::ToString($sha1.ComputeHash([System.IO.File]::ReadAllBytes($file)))'
    $files = @{}
    foreach ($file in $f) {
        $hash = iex $hashfunction
        $files[$file.Name] = $hash
        echo "$hash`t$($file.FullName)"
    }
    while ($true) {
        sleep $interval
        foreach ($file in $f) {
            $hash = iex $hashfunction
            if ($files[$file.Name] -ne $hash) {
                iex $command
            }
        }
    }
}

Example usage:

$c = 'send-mailmessage -to "[email protected]" -from "[email protected]" -subject "$($file.Name) has been altered!"'
$f = ls C:\MyFolder\aFile.jpg

watch $f $c 60
0
4

You can use the System.IO.FileSystemWatcher to monitor a file.

$watcher = New-Object System.IO.FileSystemWatcher
$watcher.Path = $searchPath
$watcher.IncludeSubdirectories = $true
$watcher.EnableRaisingEvents = $true

See also this article

6
  • Well I find that on google but as I sad how to make it in a function that will watch file, and fire commands?
    – IGRACH
    Mar 15, 2015 at 22:14
  • Take a look at this reference
    – bytecode77
    Mar 15, 2015 at 22:17
  • Well I have been reading this, and I have no idea what to do. I'm using powershell for quite a while, and have many functions written but this is so confusing.
    – IGRACH
    Mar 15, 2015 at 22:22
  • How do you get the output from the watcher? Jul 21, 2017 at 20:41
  • 3
    FYI Jan's answer is much better. Shows how to get the output from the watcher Jul 24, 2017 at 15:27
3

Here is another option.

I just needed to write my own to watch and run tests within a Docker container. Jan's solution is much more elegant, but FileSystemWatcher is broken within Docker containers presently. My approach is similar to Vasili's, but much lazier, trusting the file system's write time.

Here's the function I needed, which runs the command block each time the file changes.

function watch($command, $file) {
    $this_time = (get-item $file).LastWriteTime
    $last_time = $this_time
    while($true) {
        if ($last_time -ne $this_time) {
            $last_time = $this_time
            invoke-command $command
        }
        sleep 1
        $this_time = (get-item $file).LastWriteTime
    }
}

Here is one that waits until the file changes, runs the block, then exits.

function waitfor($command, $file) {
    $this_time = (get-item $file).LastWriteTime
    $last_time = $this_time
    while($last_time -eq $this_time) {
        sleep 1
        $this_time = (get-item $file).LastWriteTime
    }
    invoke-command $command
}
1

I had a similar problem. I first wanted to use Windows events and register, but this would be less fault-tolerant as the solution beneath.
My solution was a polling script (intervals of 3 seconds). The script has a minimal footprint on the system and notices changes very quickly. During the loop my script can do more things (actually I check 3 different folders).

My polling script is started through the task manager. The schedule is start every 5 minutes with the flag stop-when-already-running. This way it will restart after a reboot or after a crash.
Using the task manager for polling every 3 seconds is too frequent for the task manager. When you add a task to the scheduler make sure you do not use network drives (that would call for extra settings) and give your user batch privileges.

I give my script a clean start by shutting it down a few minutes before midnight. The task manager starts the script every morning (the init function of my script will exit 1 minute around midnight).

3
  • How is polling every 3 seconds more fault tolerant then subscribing to an event that is generated the moment a change occurs. Depends on your requirements, but in 3 seconds you cuould miss thousands of events. Apr 6, 2015 at 12:32
  • In my situation a have a few files every minute. Files that arrive when my program is still starting up and not yet listening or a windows service being restarted, I do not care about those. When you take precautions and look to things like blogs.msdn.com/b/winsdk/archive/2014/10/29/… using events should be reliable too.
    – Walter A
    Apr 6, 2015 at 12:45
  • That's fair enough, personally I find FileSystemWatcher events very reliable, as I have not run into the buffer limitations yet. In my code I was looking for small temp files that only appear for a fraction of a second. Apr 7, 2015 at 3:22
1

I was looking for something I could run as a one-liner from a terminal. This is what I arrived at:

while ($True) { if ((Get-Item .\readme.md).LastWriteTime -ne $LastWriteTime) { "Hello!"; $LastWriteTime = (Get-Item .\readme.md).LastWriteTime; Sleep 1  } }
0

Another simple version:

$date = get-date
while ( (dir file.txt -ea 0 | % lastwritetime) -lt $date -and $count++ -lt 10) {
  sleep 1
}
'file changed or timeout'
0

Another strategy is to use the filesystem to govern when the watcher triggers. I like it better than the $global: variable. It's very linux-y; like git, etc.

$pollSeconds = 0.758
$throttleSeconds = 2 * 2.71828
$rootPath = $PSScriptRoot
$watchfile = Join-Path -Path $rootPath -ChildPath ".watchfile"

Function RunMyStuff {
    # this is the bit we want to happen when the file changes
    try {
        $changeFile = Get-Content $watchfile | Get-Item
        Push-Location $changeFile.Directory
        Write-Host "`n    Changed $($changeFile.Directory)`n" -ForegroundColor Yellow

        if (Test-Path -Path "init.tf" ) {
            terraform init -reconfigure -backend=false
            terraform validate
        }
        else {
            .\build.ps1
        }

        Write-Host "`n"
    }
    finally {
        $wait = (Get-Date).AddSeconds($throttleSeconds)
        Write-Host "`nPausing watch for $throttleSeconds seconds" -NoNewline -ForegroundColor Yellow
        while ((Get-Date) -lt $wait) {
            # We need this to block the IO thread until there is something to run 
            # so the script doesn't finish. If we call the action directly from 
            # the event it won't be able to write to the console
            Write-Host "." -NoNewline -ForegroundColor Yellow
            Start-Sleep -Milliseconds ($pollSeconds * 1000)
        }
        Pop-Location
    }
}

Function Watch {    
    try {
        $watcher = New-Object System.IO.FileSystemWatcher $rootPath, "*.tf" -Property @{ 
            IncludeSubdirectories = $true
            EnableRaisingEvents   = $true
            NotifyFilter          = [IO.NotifyFilters]'FileName, LastWrite'
        }

        Register-ObjectEvent -InputObject $Watcher -EventName "Changed" -Action {
            $watchfile = Join-Path -Path $PSScriptRoot -ChildPath ".watchfile"
            Set-Content -Value $event.SourceEventArgs.FullPath -Path $watchfile -Force -NoNewline
        } > $null

        while ($true) {
            while (-not (Test-Path $watchfile)) {
                # We need this to block the IO thread until there is something to run 
                # so the script doesn't finish. If we call the action directly from 
                # the event it won't be able to write to the console
                Write-Host "." -NoNewline -ForegroundColor Blue
                Start-Sleep -Milliseconds ($pollSeconds * 1000)
            }

            # a file has changed, run our stuff on the I/O thread so we can see the output
            RunMyStuff

            # begin polling for changes
            if (Test-Path $watchfile) { Remove-Item $watchfile }
            Write-Host "`n`nWatching every $pollSeconds seconds for changes" -NoNewline -ForegroundColor Blue
        }
    }
    finally {
        # CTRL+C to break out of the loop
        if (Test-Path $watchfile) { Remove-Item $watchfile }
        Write-Host "`n"
        Get-EventSubscriber | Unregister-Event
        $watcher.Dispose()
    }
}

if (Test-Path $watchfile) { Remove-Item $watchfile }
Write-Host "`nWatcher setup in $rootPath`n" -ForegroundColor Green
Write-Host "`nWatching every $pollSeconds seconds for changes" -NoNewline -ForegroundColor Blue

Watch

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