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I'm trying to use a PowerShell script running Robocopy* to back some files up to a newly-made directory:

$Timestamp = Get-Date -format ddMMyyyy

$DestFolder = "`"\\NASBOX\Archives\$Timestamp\`""
$SourceFolder = "`"\\DESKTOP\d$`""

ROBOCOPY $SourceFolder $DestFolder /COPYALL /B /R:10 /W:90 /LOG:$Timestamp.txt /FP /TEE

This gives me the following error:

2018/01/23 16:26:20 ERROR 123 (0x0000007B) Accessing Destination Directory \\NASBOX\Archives\23012018" \COPYALL \B \R:10 \W:90 \LOG:23012018.txt \FP \TEE\
The filename, directory name, or volume label syntax is incorrect.

I've tried a few different methods, including passing the arguments as an array. Every single thing I've tried results in the exact same error.

I roughly understand why this is happening, but despite ~two hours spent online I can't find a solution that works in my specific context.

Where am I going wrong?

* I tried using Copy-Item but there are some super long directory paths on this desktop's "D" drive.

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  • Your error has a quote at the the end of the folder without a matching open quote.
    – Matt
    Jan 23, 2018 at 16:35

3 Answers 3

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The issue is the trailing slash in the path you are building:

"\\NASBOX\Archives\23012018\"

This slash is escaping the double quote for robocopy, it is seeing this path as including a quote symbol at the end :

\\NASBOX\Archives\23012018"

The error message shows this, but isn't very helpful! To fix the issue, simply remove the trailing slash from your path:

$DestFolder = "`"\\NASBOX\Archives\$Timestamp`""
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  • The "quote escaping" is not necessary. Just put the paths in the variables, use those variables on the robocopy command line, and PowerShell will quote when necessary. Jan 23, 2018 at 17:44
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You don't need to try so hard with escaping of quotes in your variables. PowerShell handles most of this for you. This should be all you need to do:

$Timestamp = Get-Date -Format ddMMyyyy

$SourceFolder = "\\DESKTOP\d$"
$DestFolder = "\\NASBOX\Archives\$Timestamp"

ROBOCOPY $SourceFolder $DestFolder /COPYALL /B /R:10 /W:90 /LOG:$Timestamp.txt /FP /TEE

Note that the destination folder shouldn't include a trailing \.

TL;DR - It is not necessary to create strings with embedded " characters to pass to robocopy. Just put the variables on the robocopy command line and PowerShell will quote automatically when necessary.

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Function Copy-File {
    [CmdletBinding()]   
    Param(
        [Parameter(Position=0)]
        [string]$source,
        [Parameter(Position=1)]
        [string]$dest,
        [Parameter(Position=2)]
        [string]$sourcefile,
        [Parameter(Position=3)]
        [ref]$RoboError
        )
    Write-Log -message "Copying $sourcefile from $source to $dest"
    $robotoday=(Get-Date).ToString('yyyyMMdd')
    $logfile = -join($env:systemdrive, '\logs\', $robotoday, '_robocopy.log')
    $what = @("$sourcefile",'/COPY:DAT', '/Z', '/E')
    $options = @("/R:1","/W:1","/TEE","/ETA","/LOG+:$logfile")
    $cmdArgs = @($source,$dest,$what,$options)
    robocopy @cmdArgs
    if ($lastexitcode -gt 7) {
        $RoboError.value=$TRUE
        Write-Log -level 'warn' -message "Robocopy function failed with error: $lastexitcode"
    }
} # End Copy-File

[bool]$RoboError=$FALSE
Copy-File -source $copysource -dest $copydestination -sourcefile '*' -RoboError([ref]$RoboError)

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