Generally:
If you pass a command (-Command
) or script file (-File
) to execute to PowerShell's CLI (powershell.exe
in Windows PowerShell, pwsh.exe
in PowerShell [Core] v6+), PowerShell by default executes the command / script and then exits.
With a command or script specified for execution, you need to add the -NoExit
switch if you want the new session to remain open.
Caveat: (Unless you call directly from within PowerShell with a script block), a positional argument - i.e., one neither preceded by -Command
nor -File
- is implicitly bound to:
-Command
in Windows PowerShell
-File
in PowerShell [Core] v6+.
Therefore, it's advisable to use the target parameter name explicitly.
With Start-Process
(whose built-in alias on Windows - but not on Unix - is start
):
Note: The primary use of Start-Process
is to launch an independent process asynchronously in a new window. However, the latter isn't supported on Unix-like platforms, where Start-Process
's utility is therefore limited.
start powershell { ECHO "hi" }
happens to work from PowerShell (except that the window closes right after executing the command), but it's important to note that you cannot actually pass script blocks to Start-Process
, only strings.
Start-Process
accepts an executable name (implied -FilePath
parameter), and an array of string arguments (implied -ArgumentList
/ -Args
parameter).
If you pass a script block ({ ... }
), it is automatically stringified, meaning that its literal string contents are used (stripped of the {
and }
) as the (only) -ArgumentList
string value.
Thus, bypassing the unnecessary script-block creation, your command - with -NoExit
applied as desired - should be (with explicitly named parameters; note that -Command
and its argument must come last):
Start-Process -FilePath powershell -ArgumentList '-NoExit -Command ECHO "hi"'
Note:
While passing arguments individually, as an array to -ArgumentList
is arguably conceptually cleaner, it is actually better to pass all arguments as a single string, using embedded quoting as necessary, due to a longstanding bug - see GitHub issue #5576.
Trying to open an interactive shell in a new window as a different user, via the -Credential
parameter, is broken up to at least PowerShell 7.1, resulting in keyboard input getting blocked both in the new window and in the caller's window - see this answer for a workaround with runas.exe
and GitHub issue #12129.