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