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I am new to powershell. I use the following powershell script to copy file from a network share, but the time cost is ridiculously long compared to a traditional windows batch file. What could be the cause?

$dlls=get-childitem -path "\\myShare\myBinFolder" -include *.dll -recurse
copy-item $dlls -destination c:\bins

Thanks

Update - 1 - 1:38 PM 1/13/2011

Why Get-ChildItem is So Slow?

http://blogs.msdn.com/b/powershell/archive/2009/11/04/why-is-get-childitem-so-slow.aspx

3 Answers 3

4

Do not use the Include parameter. Use the Filter parameter instead. Include will require every file to be returned from the share and filtered locally. Using Filter should allow the filtering to happen on the remote end.

$dlls = Get-ChildItem -Path "\\myShare\myBinFolder" -Filter *.dll -recurse

or using positional feature of these parameters:

$dlls = Get-ChildItem \\myShare\myBinFolder *.dll -r

In fact, the only time I would ever use Include over Filter is if I needed to specify multiple filter terms (Include takes a string array) e.g.:

Get-ChildItem . -inc *.h,*.cpp,*.rc -r
3

One way to optimize this is to avoid assigning it to a variable. Try this

Get-ChildItem *.dll -Path \\Myshare\Folder -recurse | % { Copy-item $_.FullName -destination C:\bins }

You can use Measure-Command to measure how much time these two methods are taking. You can do that by:

(Measure-Command {     Get-ChildItem *.dll -Path \\Myshare\Folder -recurse | % { Copy-item $_.FullName -destination C:\bins } }).Milliseconds

and

(Measure-Command {$dlls = Get-ChildItem *.dll -Path \\Myshare\Folder -recurse; copy-item $dlls -Destination C:\bins}).Milliseconds
5
  • I am new to PowerShell, could you explain your script a little? Especially the part behind the pipe symbol. Thanks. Jan 13, 2011 at 5:36
  • Sorry. % is the short form for Foreach-object. In this case, we are using pipe to send the objects as they are generated. In your initial code, all the objects are generated and assigned to a variable. In my example, each object as it gets generated, gets copied immediately.
    – ravikanth
    Jan 13, 2011 at 6:13
  • I edited my answer to add a way to measure how much time it takes. Let me know if you see any difference.
    – ravikanth
    Jan 13, 2011 at 6:16
  • Hmm, I would think that assigning to a variable would be a shade faster since the formatting engine doesn't run in that case.
    – Keith Hill
    Jan 13, 2011 at 16:56
  • I guess if the memory impact is great enough it could impact performance by storing the results rather then streaming them but only for a fairly large set of results.
    – Keith Hill
    Jan 13, 2011 at 17:44
3

All you really need from the remote system is a list of the full paths to the .dll files in that share. Get-childitem is overkill for that, and has known issues working with large directory structures remotely.

See if this isn't a lot quicker:

cmd /c dir \\Myshare\Folder\*.dll /b /s |% {Copy-Item $_ -destination C:\bins} 

Note: the double backslash in the UNC is showing up as a single in the post.
How do I fix that?

3
  • Indent four spaces to get code formatting (or use the toolbar button on the editor toolbar).
    – Richard
    Jan 13, 2011 at 12:30
  • Note that using cmd /c will mangle some non-ASCII characters. PowerShell is unable to find some files again when I get their name via cmd.
    – Joey
    Jan 13, 2011 at 15:35
  • Noted. But in this application, finding non-ASCII characters in a .dll filename seems unlikely.
    – mjolinor
    Jan 13, 2011 at 19:22

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