I want my PowerShell script to stop when any of the commands I run fail (like set -e
in bash). I'm using both Powershell commands (New-Object System.Net.WebClient
) and programs (.\setup.exe
).
12 Answers
$ErrorActionPreference = "Stop"
will get you part of the way there (i.e. this works great for cmdlets).
However for EXEs you're going to need to check $LastExitCode
yourself after every exe invocation and determine whether that failed or not. Unfortunately I don't think PowerShell can help here because on Windows, EXEs aren't terribly consistent on what constitutes a "success" or "failure" exit code. Most follow the UNIX standard of 0 indicating success but not all do. Check out the CheckLastExitCode function in this blog post. You might find it useful.
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4Does
$ErrorActionPreference = "Stop"
work for well-behaved programs (that return 0 on success)? Mar 30, 2012 at 20:56 -
25No, it doesn't work at all for EXEs. It only works for PowerShell cmdlets which run in-process. It is kind of pain but you have to check $LastExitCode after every EXE invocation, check that against the expected exit code and if that test indicates failure, you have to throw to terminate execution of the script e.g.
throw "$exe failed with exit code $LastExitCode"
where $exe is just the path to the EXE. Mar 30, 2012 at 21:18 -
2Accepted because it includes info on how to make it work with external programs. Apr 22, 2012 at 22:23
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4I put in a feature request about it here: connect.microsoft.com/PowerShell/feedback/details/751703/… Jun 29, 2012 at 14:12
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5note that psake has a commandlet called "exec" which can you can use to wrap calls to external programs with a check for LastExitCode and display an error (and stop, if desired)– enorl76Nov 28, 2012 at 20:01
You should be able to accomplish this by using the statement $ErrorActionPreference = "Stop"
at the beginning of your scripts.
The default setting of $ErrorActionPreference
is Continue
, which is why you are seeing your scripts keep going after errors occur.
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34
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This is an incomplete answer, however it was posted prior to the currently selected answer which builds on it. So it deserve its upvotes too, imho.– minsNov 10, 2022 at 14:30
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Sadly, due to buggy cmdlets like New-RegKey and Clear-Disk, none of these answers are enough. I've currently settled on the following code in a file called ps_support.ps1
:
Set-StrictMode -Version Latest
$ErrorActionPreference = "Stop"
$PSDefaultParameterValues['*:ErrorAction']='Stop'
function ThrowOnNativeFailure {
if (-not $?)
{
throw 'Native Failure'
}
}
Then in any powershell file, after the CmdletBinding
and Param
for the file (if present), I have the following:
$ErrorActionPreference = "Stop"
. "$PSScriptRoot\ps_support.ps1"
The duplicated ErrorActionPreference = "Stop"
line is intentional. If I've goofed and somehow gotten the path to ps_support.ps1
wrong, that needs to not silently fail!
I keep ps_support.ps1
in a common location for my repo/workspace, so the path to it for the dot-sourcing may change depending on where the current .ps1
file is.
Any native call gets this treatment:
native_call.exe
ThrowOnNativeFailure
Having that file to dot-source has helped me maintain my sanity while writing powershell scripts. :-)
A slight modification to the answer from @alastairtree:
function Invoke-Call {
param (
[scriptblock]$ScriptBlock,
[string]$ErrorAction = $ErrorActionPreference
)
& @ScriptBlock
if (($lastexitcode -ne 0) -and $ErrorAction -eq "Stop") {
exit $lastexitcode
}
}
Invoke-Call -ScriptBlock { dotnet build . } -ErrorAction Stop
The key differences here are:
- it uses the Verb-Noun (mimicing
Invoke-Command
) - implies that it uses the call operator under the covers
- mimics
-ErrorAction
behavior from built in cmdlets - exits with same exit code rather than throwing exception with new message
-
1How do you pass parameters / variables? e.g.
Invoke-Call { dotnet build $something }
May 24, 2019 at 8:42 -
1@MichaelBlake the inquiry of yours is so right, allowing a params passthrough would make this approach gold. I am inspecting adamtheautomator.com/pass-hashtables-invoke-command-argument to adjust the Invoke-Call to support params pass-through. If I succeed, I will post it as another answer here. Sep 7, 2019 at 17:35
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1Why do you use the splatting operator during the invoke? What does that get you?
& @ScriptBlock
and& $ScriptBlock
appear to do the same thing. Haven't been able to google what the difference is in this case Oct 12, 2019 at 14:03
You need slightly different error handling for powershell functions and for calling exe's, and you need to be sure to tell the caller of your script that it has failed. Building on top of Exec
from the library Psake, a script that has the structure below will stop on all errors, and is usable as a base template for most scripts.
Set-StrictMode -Version latest
$ErrorActionPreference = "Stop"
# Taken from psake https://github.com/psake/psake
<#
.SYNOPSIS
This is a helper function that runs a scriptblock and checks the PS variable $lastexitcode
to see if an error occcured. If an error is detected then an exception is thrown.
This function allows you to run command-line programs without having to
explicitly check the $lastexitcode variable.
.EXAMPLE
exec { svn info $repository_trunk } "Error executing SVN. Please verify SVN command-line client is installed"
#>
function Exec
{
[CmdletBinding()]
param(
[Parameter(Position=0,Mandatory=1)][scriptblock]$cmd,
[Parameter(Position=1,Mandatory=0)][string]$errorMessage = ("Error executing command {0}" -f $cmd)
)
& $cmd
if ($lastexitcode -ne 0) {
throw ("Exec: " + $errorMessage)
}
}
Try {
# Put all your stuff inside here!
# powershell functions called as normal and try..catch reports errors
New-Object System.Net.WebClient
# call exe's and check their exit code using Exec
Exec { setup.exe }
} Catch {
# tell the caller it has all gone wrong
$host.SetShouldExit(-1)
throw
}
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Invoking eg:
Exec { sqlite3.exe -bail some.db "$SQL" }
, the-bail
causes an error since it's trying to interpret it as a Cmdlet parameter? Wrapping things in quotes doesn't seem to work. Any ideas?– rcoupMar 25, 2020 at 11:19 -
Is there a way to put this code somewhere central so you can do some kind of #include when you want to use the Exec method?– NickGMay 21, 2020 at 12:46
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Yeah, you can. You can put it a file named
powershell-error-handling-sanity.ps1
and then dot-source the ps1 file at t he top of any other ps1 file with. <relative_or_absolute_path_to_powershell-error-handling-sanity.ps1
Jul 2, 2020 at 17:14
I'm new to powershell but this seems to be most effective:
doSomething -arg myArg
if (-not $?) {throw "Failed to doSomething"}
for people coming here on 2021 this is my solution that covers both cmdlets and programs
function CheckLastExitCode {
param ([int[]]$SuccessCodes = @(0))
if (!$?) {
Write-Host "Last CMD failed $LastExitCode" -ForegroundColor Red
#GoToWrapperDirectory in my code I go back to the original directory that launched the script
exit
}
if ($SuccessCodes -notcontains $LastExitCode) {
Write-Host "EXE RETURNED EXIT CODE $LastExitCode" -ForegroundColor Red
#GoToWrapperDirectory in my code I go back to the original directory that launched the script
exit
}
}
you can use it like this
cd NonExistingpath
CheckLastExitCode
As far as I know, Powershell does not have any automatic handling of non-zero exit codes returned by sub-programs it invokes.
The only solution I know about so far to mimick the behavior of bash -e
is to add this check after every call to an external command:
if(!$?) { Exit $LASTEXITCODE }
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I like this solution, it's just one line to add after each external program call.– bounavDec 23, 2022 at 13:39
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1@bounav: Well, this is relative. Let's just say it's the "less worse" solution I've found. On the other hand in a bash script you just add
#!/bin/bash -e
at the beginning of each script and it applies to the whole script all the time. I really really hate Powershell just for that stupid error handling. (But unfortunately I don't have much choice using it sometimes...) Apr 22 at 7:46
I came here looking for the same thing. $ErrorActionPreference="Stop" kills my shell immediately when I'd rather see the error message (pause) before it terminates. Falling back on my batch sensibilities:
IF %ERRORLEVEL% NEQ 0 pause & GOTO EOF
I found that this works pretty much the same for my particular ps1 script:
Import-PSSession $Session
If ($? -ne "True") {Pause; Exit}
Seems like simple rethrow does the trick.
param ([string] $Path, [string] $Find, [string] $Replace)
try {
((Get-Content -path $Path -Raw) -replace $Find, $Replace) | Set-Content -Path $Path
Write-Output Completed.
} catch {
# Without try/catch block errors don't interrupt program flow.
throw
}
Now output Completed appears only after successful execution.
Redirecting stderr
to stdout
seems to also do the trick without any other commands/scriptblock wrappers although I can't find an explanation why it works that way..
# test.ps1
$ErrorActionPreference = "Stop"
aws s3 ls s3://xxx
echo "==> pass"
aws s3 ls s3://xxx 2>&1
echo "shouldn't be here"
This will output the following as expected (the command aws s3 ...
returns $LASTEXITCODE = 255
)
PS> .\test.ps1
An error occurred (AccessDenied) when calling the ListObjectsV2 operation: Access Denied
==> pass
I recommend to apply simple exit code validation. Depends on how sophisticated solution you need.
Best for single validation - stops only when docker-compose fails:
docker-compose up --detach || exit 1
Good if you want to stop the script and propagate error message
docker-compose up --detach || throw "Script has failed, check logs above"
or more complex and reusable function:
function terminate() {
Write-Error "Found exit code: $LASTEXITCODE"
throw "Last executed operation has failed, check logs above!"
}
docker-compose up --detach || terminate
set -e
· Issue #3415 · PowerShell/PowerShell.$PSNativeCommandUseErrorActionPreference
to$true
and$ErrorActionPreference
to'Stop'
can stop the script execution when native command error occurs. Test code:& { $PSNativeCommandUseErrorActionPreference = $true; $ErrorActionPreference = 'Stop'; ping.exe bbb; ping.exe aaa }
.