//
// Copyright (c) 2009 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
//
// DISCLAIMER OF WARRANTY: The software is licensed “as-is.” You
// bear the risk of using it. Microsoft gives no express warranties,
// guarantees or conditions. You may have additional consumer rights
// under your local laws which this agreement cannot change. To the extent
// permitted under your local laws, Microsoft excludes the implied warranties
// of merchantability, fitness for a particular purpose and non-infringement.
namespace Microsoft.Samples.PowerShell.Commands
{
using System;
using System.Diagnostics;
using System.Management.Automation; // Windows PowerShell namespace.
#region GetProcCommand
///
/// This class implements the get-proc cmdlet.
///
[Cmdlet(VerbsCommon.Get, "Proc")]
public class GetProcCommand : Cmdlet
{
#region Parameters
///
/// The names of the processes to act on.
///
private string[] processNames;
///
/// Gets or setsthe list of process names on
/// which the Get-Proc cmdlet will work.
///
[Parameter(
Position = 0,
ValueFromPipeline = true,
ValueFromPipelineByPropertyName = true)]
[ValidateNotNullOrEmpty]
public string[] Name
{
get { return this.processNames; }
set { this.processNames = value; }
}
#endregion Parameters
#region Cmdlet Overrides
///
/// The ProcessRecord method calls the Process.GetProcesses
/// method to retrieve the processes specified by the Name
/// parameter. Then, the WriteObject method writes the
/// associated processes to the pipeline.
///
protected override void ProcessRecord()
{
// If no process names are passed to the cmdlet, get all
// processes.
if (this.processNames == null)
{
WriteObject(Process.GetProcesses(), true);
}
else
{
// If process names are passed to the cmdlet, get and write
// the associated processes.
foreach (string name in this.processNames)
{
WriteObject(Process.GetProcessesByName(name), true);
}
} // if (processNames ...
} // ProcessRecord
#endregion Overrides
} // End GetProcCommand class.
#endregion GetProcCommand
}