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I have a need to run a PowerShell function from a Python script. Both the .ps1 and the .py files currently live in the same directory. The functions I want to call are in the PowerShell script. Most answers I've seen are for running entire PowerShell scripts from Python. In this case, I'm trying to run an individual function within a PowerShell script from a Python script.

Here is the sample PowerShell script:

# sample PowerShell
Function hello
{
    Write-Host "Hi from the hello function : )"
}

Function bye
{
    Write-Host "Goodbye"
}

Write-Host "PowerShell sample says hello."

and the Python script:

import argparse
import subprocess as sp

parser = argparse.ArgumentParser(description='Sample call to PowerShell function from Python')
parser.add_argument('--functionToCall', metavar='-f', default='hello', help='Specify function to run')

args = parser.parse_args()

psResult = sp.Popen([r'C:\WINDOWS\system32\WindowsPowerShell\v1.0\powershell.exe',
'-ExecutionPolicy',
'Unrestricted',
'. ./samplePowerShell',
args.functionToCall],
stdout = sp.PIPE,
stderr = sp.PIPE)

output, error = psResult.communicate()
rc = psResult.returncode

print "Return code given to Python script is: " + str(rc)
print "\n\nstdout:\n\n" + str(output)
print "\n\nstderr: " + str(error)

So, somehow, I want to run the 'hello()' or the 'bye()' function that is in the PowerShell sample. It would also be nice to know how to pass in parameters to the function. Thanks!

2 Answers 2

55

You want two things: dot source the script (which is (as far as I know) similar to python's import), and subprocess.call.

import subprocess
subprocess.call(["C:\\WINDOWS\\system32\\WindowsPowerShell\\v1.0\\powershell.exe", ". \"./SamplePowershell\";", "&hello"])

so what happens here is that we start up powershell, tell it to import your script, and use a semicolon to end that statement. Then we can execute more commands, namely, hello.

You also want to add parameters to the functions, so let's use the one from the article above (modified slightly):

Function addOne($intIN)
{
    Write-Host ($intIN + 1)
}

and then call the function with whatever parameter you want, as long as powershell can handle that input. So we'll modify the above python to:

import subprocess
subprocess.call(["C:\\WINDOWS\\system32\\WindowsPowerShell\\v1.0\\powershell.exe", ". \"./SamplePowershell\";", "&addOne(10)"])

this gives me the output:

PowerShell sample says hello.
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6
  • 1
    Thank you. That is quite helpful! I seem to be successful using the subprocess.Popen() call as well as the subprocess.call(), now after having included the escape sequences you pointed out. May I ask if there's an advantage to using subprocess.call() over subprocess.Popen()? My first reason for using Popen() is to gather the stdout, stderr, and the return code. Can I do that with subprocess.call() as well? Also thank you for the syntax to calling functions with parameters.
    – H_H
    Jan 28, 2013 at 22:03
  • 1
    subprocess.call() waits until the program is done. Popen is more useful if you want to be able to communicate with the program while it's running. If you want the stdout and stderr streams, the only way I know to get those with the subprocess module is to output them to text files, like so: returnValue= subprocess.call("", executable="fposo.exe", stdout=open("out.txt", "w+"), stderr=open("err.txt", "w+")) print "childProcess returned " + str(returnValue) Jan 29, 2013 at 2:50
  • 1
    more relevantly: print "childProcess returned " + str(subprocess.call([". \"./SamplePowershell\";", "&hello"], executable="C:\\WINDOWS\\system32\\WindowsPowerShell\\v1.0\\powershell.exe", stdout=open("out.txt", "w+"), stderr=open("err.txt", "w+"))) Jan 29, 2013 at 2:57
  • 1
    As an aside: In PowerShell, functions are invoked like shell commands - foo arg1 arg2 - not like C# methods - foo(arg1, arg2); see Get-Help about_Parsing. If you use , to separate arguments, you'll construct an array that a function sees as a single argument. To prevent accidental use of method syntax, use Set-StrictMode -Version 2 or higher, but note its other effects.
    – mklement0
    Sep 12, 2020 at 12:13
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    As an aside: I suggest not using Write-Host in sample code, as it might mislead beginners to think that (a) using a cmdlet is necessary to produce output in PowerShell (it isn't) and that (b) the cmdlet to use for producing output is Write-Host (it generally isn't, unless your intent is to write directly to the screen (host) rather than to output data).
    – mklement0
    Sep 12, 2020 at 12:13
2

Here is a short and simple way to do that

import os
os.system("powershell.exe echo hello world")
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