PowerShellPracticeAndStyle
Pester
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PowerShellPracticeAndStyle | Pester | |
---|---|---|
26 | 24 | |
2,137 | 3,015 | |
1.6% | 0.6% | |
5.4 | 7.3 | |
12 months ago | 3 days ago | |
PowerShell | ||
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
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For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
PowerShellPracticeAndStyle
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Quick deletion script for clearing out caches
B. Performance related: https://github.com/PoshCode/PowerShellPracticeAndStyle/blob/master/Best-Practices/Performance.md
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PowerShell Code Standards - Priorities
I'd also suggest taking a look at https://github.com/PoshCode/PowerShellPracticeAndStyle
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Where is the best place to learn Windows PowerShell?
There are likely other style guides to follow as well but I found this helpful when starting out: https://github.com/PoshCode/PowerShellPracticeAndStyle
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Why does VS Code still have so many issues?
Of course I can move the else up behind the curly brace... and although it is listed as a best practice in this best practice guide, I find it ugly and crowds the code. Regardless, it is syntactically correct everywhere else, so why is VS Code being a jerk?
- The PowerShell Best Practices and Style Guide
- A Text To Speech Using Powershell.
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PowerShell Best Practices for Expert Level
I recommened reading the The PowerShell Best Practices and Style Guide.
- what programming langue to learn.
- [off topic] why do folks "follow" others?
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Variables naming best practices in Powershell
PoshCode/PowerShellPracticeAndStyle: The Unofficial PowerShell Best Practices and Style Guide — https://github.com/PoshCode/PowerShellPracticeAndStyle
Pester
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PyPyInstaller Powershell Module Initial Code Push
Pester is what's used for most Powershell testing. While it has some pretty amazing features, it does have issues with .NET class method mocking and sometimes scope can be weird. Here's a simple example:
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Dev Stuff Distracting Me From Article Writing
This is the fun that is Powershell mocking, or at least the form that someone completely new to Powershell would write. One thing I must say is that Pester's mocking capabilities are quite easy to work with. It reminded me of pytest mock patching, only well, simpler. Most of the time spent fighting tests was due to the nuances of pipeline flow. For example, you can see that your mocked method was called X many times through something like this:
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Windows 11 malware adds excludes to windows defender scan
The folder blocked all users from reading the files so if you open up the files it looks empty, even tho you have show hidden files turned on. You can't delete it since it says that you need access from TrustedInstaller. This is cleaver by the hacker since trusted installer is actually the name of a windows feature. HOW-EVER by using the command line I found out that the folder contains framework like these two. https://github.com/d1pakda5/PowerShell-for-Pentesters https://github.com/pester/Pester
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I have to learn PowerShell in 2 weeks. is that possible?
I'm really surprised that nobody in this thread has mentioned Pester. PowerShell has its own automated unit testing framework that is incredibly versatile. You do need to know PowerShell in order to really make it shine, but if there are some simple tests that your class requires such as "make sure this value conforms to this regex value", Pester is pretty easy to pick up and utilize.
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Sys admin interview coming up, help your loyal helpdesk pupil to not let his dreams be dreams
Once you start building code/scripts that are used consistently, consider adding Pester testing to your work. Most sysadmin managers may not get it, but if you're talking to dev managers, they'll absolutely get the importance of unit testing and why it's a good tool to have. Again, down the road. Learn the basics first.
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Thoughts on authoring cmdlets
Finally, the Pester testing framework, which ships with Powershell, is a great way to ensure your code actually does what it's meant to do.
- Git repo best practices for Powershell.
- Looking for public powershell projects to learn best practices and as a reference
- Testing Solutions
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Test your PowerShell code with Pester
Pester GH page
What are some alternatives?
PowerShell-Beautifier - A whitespace reformatter and code cleaner for Windows PowerShell and PowerShell Core
bicep - Bicep is a declarative language for describing and deploying Azure resources
PSKoans - A simple, fun, and interactive way to learn the PowerShell language through Pester unit testing.
PSScriptAnalyzer - Download ScriptAnalyzer from PowerShellGallery
dbatools - 🚀 SQL Server automation and instance migrations have never been safer, faster or freer
arm-ttk - Azure Resource Manager Template Toolkit
Chocolatey - Chocolatey - the package manager for Windows
Plaster - Plaster is a template-based file and project generator written in PowerShell.
ePOwerShell - This PowerShell module allows you to easily connect to and work with your McAfee ePO Server in PowerShell 5.0+.
Invoke-Build - Build Automation in PowerShell
RDSv3-to-CSV-Converter - An exe to convert RDSv3 DB Files back to CSV Files
aws-tools-for-powershell - The AWS Tools for PowerShell lets developers and administrators manage their AWS services from the PowerShell scripting environment.