130 lines
4.1 KiB
Markdown
130 lines
4.1 KiB
Markdown
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Building a C# Cmdlet
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====================
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This example project demonstrates how to build your own C# cmdlet for
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PowerShell.
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Setup
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-----
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We use the [.NET Command Line Interface][dotnet-cli] (`dotnet`) to build the
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cmdlet library. Install the `dotnet` tool and ensure `dotnet --version` is at
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least `1.0.0-rc2`.
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.NET CLI uses a `project.json` file for build specifications:
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```json
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{
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"name": "SendGreeting",
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"description": "Example C# Cmdlet project",
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"version": "1.0.0-*",
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"dependencies": {
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"Microsoft.PowerShell.5.ReferenceAssemblies": "1.0.0-*"
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},
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"frameworks": {
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"netstandard1.5": {
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"imports": [ "net40" ],
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"dependencies": {
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"Microsoft.NETCore": "5.0.1-*",
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"Microsoft.NETCore.Portable.Compatibility": "1.0.1-*"
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}
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}
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}
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}
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```
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Note that no source files are specified. .NET CLI automatically will build all
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`.cs` files in the project directory.
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Going through this step-by-step:
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- `"name": "SendGreeting"`: Name of the assembly to output (otherwise it
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defaults to the name of the containing folder).
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- `"version": "1.0.0-*"`: The wild-card can be replaced using the
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`--version-suffix` flag to `dotnet build`.
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- [Microsoft.PowerShell.5.ReferenceAssemblies][powershell]: Contains the SDK
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reference assemblies for PowerShell version 5. Targets the `net40` framework.
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- [netstandard1.5][]: The target framework for .NET Core portable libraries.
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This is an abstract framework that will work anywhere its dependencies work.
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- `"imports": [ "net4" ]`: Since the PowerShell reference assemblies target the
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older `net40` framework, we `import` it here to tell `dotnet restore` that we
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know we're loading a possibly-incompatible package.
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- [Microsoft.NETCore][netcore]: Provides a set of packages that can be used when
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building portable libraries on .NETCore based platforms.
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- [Microsoft.NETCore.Portable.Compatibility][portable]: Enables compatibility
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with portable libraries targeting previous .NET releases like .NET Framework
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4.0. Required to build against the PowerShell reference assemblies package.
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Other dependencies can be added as needed; refer to the
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[.NET Core package gallery][myget] for package availability, name, and version
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information.
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Because the .NET Core packages are not yet released to NuGet.org, you also need
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this `NuGet.config` file to setup the [.NET Core MyGet feed][myget]:
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```xml
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<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
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<configuration>
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<packageSources>
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<clear />
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<add key="CI Builds (dotnet-core)" value="https://www.myget.org/F/dotnet-core/api/v3/index.json" />
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<add key="nuget.org" value="https://api.nuget.org/v3/index.json" />
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</packageSources>
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</configuration>
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```
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[dotnet-cli]: https://github.com/dotnet/cli#new-to-net-cli
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[powershell]: https://www.nuget.org/packages/Microsoft.PowerShell.5.ReferenceAssemblies
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[netstandard1.5]: https://github.com/dotnet/corefx/blob/master/Documentation/architecture/net-standard-applications.md
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[netcore]: https://dotnet.myget.org/feed/dotnet-core/package/nuget/Microsoft.NETCore
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[portable]: https://dotnet.myget.org/feed/dotnet-core/package/nuget/Microsoft.NETCore.Portable.Compatibility
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[myget]: https://dotnet.myget.org/gallery/dotnet-core
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Building
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--------
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.NET Core is a package-based platform, so the correct dependencies first need to
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be resolved:
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```
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dotnet restore
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```
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This reads the `project.json` and `NuGet.config` files and uses NuGet to restore
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the necessary packages. The generated `project.lock.json` lockfile contains the
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resolved dependency graph.
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Once packages are restored, building is simple:
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```
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dotnet build
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```
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This will produce the assembly `./bin/Debug/netstandard1.5/SendGreeting.dll`.
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This build/restore process should work anywhere .NET Core works, including
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Windows, Linux, and OS X.
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Deployment
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----------
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In PowerShell, check `$env:PSMODULEPATH` and install the new cmdlet in its own
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module folder, such as, on Linux,
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`~/.powershell/Modules/SendGreeting/SendGreeting.dll`.
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Then import and use the module:
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```powershell
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> Import-Module SendGreeting # Module names are case-sensitive on Linux
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> Send-Greeting -Name World
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Hello World!
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```
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