4

When using a UNC path (ex: \\machine\share\dir), I can get a file list when using the dir command (Get-ChildItem) from a UNC path, but if I try [System.IO.Directory]::GetFiles, I get an empty list (not an error, just no items). I thought that PS was built on the .NET framework. Does anyone know why Get-ChildItem would work with a UNC path while the .NET GetFiles method returns an empty list?

1
  • 2
    GetFileSystemEntries method would be the analog you're looking for. Also, the difference is that NET class is faster, especially with UNC parts.
    – wOxxOm
    Jul 30, 2017 at 4:07

1 Answer 1

7

[System.IO.Directory]::GetFiles() returns only files, whereas Get-ChildItem (and its built-in alias dir) by default returns both files and directories.

Therefore, calling [System.IO.Directory]::GetFiles() on a directory that has sub-directories only (no files) yields "nothing" (an empty string array)).

Another way of putting it, loosely speaking: Get-ChildItem is the union of [System.IO.Directory]::GetFiles() (akin to Get-ChildItem -File, PSv3+) and [System.IO.Directory]::GetDirectories() (akin to Get-ChildItem -Directory, PSv3+), or, more directly, the counterpart to [System.IO.Directory]::GetFileSystemEntries().

Another option is to use the .NET 4+ (available in PSv3+) filesystem-item enumeration APIs, such as [System.IO.Directory]::EnumerateFileSystemInfos(). For an example, see this answer of mine.

There are many specific differences between Get-ChildItem and direct use of the [System.IO.Directory] type, however, notably that Get-ChildItem returns objects rather than strings and that Get-ChildItem skips hidden items by default (-Force must be used).

As is typical, choosing between using PowerShell's own cmdlets and direct use of the .NET Framework is a tradeoff between convenience and performance.
The latter will generally be faster, and in the case at hand, that is especially true with UNC paths in PowerShell versions 1 and 2 - see this blog post.

Tip of the hat to wOxxOm and Mike Sherrill 'Cat Recall' for supplemental information.

0

Your Answer

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

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