7

Register-ObjectEvent looks for a object instance in the required parameter InputObject. What is the syntax for an object's static (Shared) event?

UPDATE: Correct syntax for TimeChanged:

$systemEvents = [Microsoft.Win32.SystemEvents]
$timeChanged = Register-ObjectEvent -InputObject $systemEvents
-EventName 'TimeChanged' -Action { Write-Host "Time changed" }

Unfortunately, the SystemEvents will not be signaled in PowerShell ISE. Here's a sample using an object's staic event that works everywhere:

$networkInformation = [System.Net.NetworkInformation.NetworkChange];
$networkAddressChanged = Register-ObjectEvent -InputObject $networkInformation 
-EventName 'NetworkAddressChanged' 
-Action { Write-Host "NetworkAddressChanged event signaled" }
1
  • 1
    There is a message loop running in PowerShell, but you need to run as an admin to access it. Mar 2, 2010 at 2:08

2 Answers 2

10
+150

If you assign a static type to a variable, you can subscribe to static events.

For example:

$MyStaticType = [MyStaticNamespace.MyStaticClass]
Register-ObjectEvent -InputObject $MyStaticType -EventName MyStaticEvent -Action {Write-Host "Caught a static event"}

To find any static events a type may have, you can use Get-Member with the -Static switch

[MyStaticNamespace.MyStaticClass] | get-member -static -membertype event

EDIT: I did notice when trying to access [Microsoft.Win32.SystemEvents] events, that I needed to be running in an elevated prompt (on Vista and above) in order to access the messages.

3

Steven's got the right answer so no need to vote on this (vote on his instead). I just wanted to post a sample snippet that folks can use to play around with static events such that you don't have to find a BCL static event that's easy to fire. :-)

$src = @'
using System;

namespace Utils {
public static class StaticEventTest 
{
    public static event EventHandler Fired;

    public static void RaiseFired()
    {
        if (Fired != null) 
        { 
            Fired(typeof(StaticEventTest), EventArgs.Empty); 
        }
    }
}}
'@

$srcId = 'Fired'

Add-Type -TypeDefinition $src

Unregister-Event -SourceIdentifier $srcId -ea 0

$id = Register-ObjectEvent ([Utils.StaticEventTest]) Fired `
          -SourceIdentifier $srcId -Action {"The static event fired"}

[Utils.StaticEventTest]::RaiseFired()

while (!$id.HasMoreData) { Start-Sleep -Milliseconds 250 }

Receive-Job $id
1
  • 2
    Thanks for this. I took the liberty of borrowing much of the snippet in my question here.
    – dxiv
    Apr 17, 2020 at 5:45

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge that you have read and understand our privacy policy and code of conduct.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.