3

I wrote a powershell script to strip R/H/S attributes off all files in a specified set of root paths. The relevant code is:

$Mask = [System.IO.FileAttributes]::ReadOnly.Value__ -bor [System.IO.FileAttributes]::Hidden.Value__ -bor [System.IO.FileAttributes]::System.Value__
Get-ChildItem -Path $Paths -Force -Recurse -ErrorAction SilentlyContinue | ForEach-Object {
    $Value = $_.Attributes.value__
    if($Value -band $Mask) {
        $Value = $Value -band -bnot $Mask
        if($PSCmdlet.ShouldProcess($_.FullName, "Set $([System.IO.FileAttributes] $Value)")) {
            $_.Attributes = $Value
        }
    }
}

This works fine, but when processing one very large folder structure, I got a few errors like this:

Exception setting "Attributes": "Could not find a part of the path 'XXXXXXXXXX'."
At YYYYYYYYYY\Grant-FullAccess.ps1:77 char:17
+                 $_.Attributes = $Value
+                 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
    + CategoryInfo          : NotSpecified: (:) [], SetValueInvocationException
    + FullyQualifiedErrorId : ExceptionWhenSetting

I find this strange because the FileInfo object being manipulated is guaranteed to exist, since it comes from a file search.

I can't give the file names because they are confidential, but I can say:

  • they are 113-116 characters long
  • the unique set of characters involved are %()+-.0123456789ABCDEFGIKLNOPRSTUVWX, none of which are illegal in a file name
  • the % character is there due to URL-encoded spaces (%20)

Do you have any suggestions as to what may be causing this? I assume that if the full path was too long, or I didn't have write permissions to the file, then a more appropriate error would be thrown.

4
  • Are these UNC paths (\\server\share\restofpath) or local paths?
    – Theo
    Oct 10, 2019 at 19:11
  • 1
    @mklement0: My intention is to process directories as well as files, but thanks for the tip. Oct 11, 2019 at 7:13
  • 1
    @mklement0: Re the long path prefix, I do now suspect it's a long path issue. I will try that today. Oct 11, 2019 at 7:22
  • @Theo: The paths will always be on a local drive. Oct 11, 2019 at 7:23

2 Answers 2

3

As stated in your own answer, the problem turned out to be an overly long path (longer than the legacy limit of 259 chars.)

In addition to enabling long-path support via Group Policy, you can enable it on a per-computer basis via the registry as follows, which requires running with elevation (as admin):

# NOTE: Must be run elevated (as admin).
# Change will take effect in FUTURE sessions.
Set-ItemProperty HKLM:\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Control\FileSystem LongPathsEnabled 1

Pass 0 to turn support off.


However, even with long-path supported turned OFF (as is invariably the case on pre-Windows 10 versions) it is possible to handle long paths:

  • In Windows PowerShell (PowerShell up to version 5.1), you must use the long-path opt-in prefix, \\?\, as discussed below.

  • In PowerShell [Core] v6+, no extra work is needed, because it always supports long paths - you neither need to turn on support system-wide nor do you need the long-path prefix discussed below.

    • Caveat: While you may use \\?\ in PowerShell [Core] as well in principle, support for it is inconsistent as of v7.0.0-rc.2; see GitHub issue #10805.

Important: Prefix \\?\ only works under the following conditions:

  • The prefixed path must be a full (absolute), normalized path (must not contain . or .. components).

    • E.g., \\?\C:\path\to\foo.txt works, but \\?\.\foo.txt does not.
    • Furthermore, if the path is a UNC path, the path requires a different form:
      • \\?\UNC\<server>\<share>\...;
      • E.g., \\server1\share2 must be represented as \\?\UNC\server1\share2
0

It did turn out to be a long path issue after all, despite the wording of the error messages. A simple Get-ChildItem search for the files produced the same errors. I finally tracked down the files mentioned in the error messages and measured their total path lengths. They were exceeding 260 characters.

I experimented with adding a \\?\ prefix to the paths, but powershell doesn't seem to like that syntax.

Fortunately, the script is being used on Windows 2016, so I tried enabling long path support in group policy. That made the whole problem go away.

1
  • \\?\ does work with Get-Item / Get-ChildItem, but only with full, normalized paths. In PowerShell Core they additionally only work if you use -LiteralPath, unfortunately - please see my answer. It's curious that you originally got an error in $_.Attributes = $Value, without an explicit path argument; that would almost suggest a bug in the .Attributes property implementation, but I could not recreate that.
    – mklement0
    Oct 16, 2019 at 17:44

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.