Major changes are as follows:
- Avoid `SecuritySupport.IsProductBinary` and unnecessary AMSI/suspicious code scan at startup time
- Update `CompiledScriptBlockData.IsProductCode` to avoid unnecessary calls to `IsProductBinary`, which attempts to retrieve catalog signature of the target file.
- Update `PerformSecurityChecks` to skip AMSI and suspicious code scan for the `.psd1` file that contains a safe `HashtableAst` only.
- Use customized `ReadOnlyBag` instead of `ImmutableHashSet` so that we can avoid loading the `System.Collections.Immutable.dll` completely.
- Replace `SHA1` with `CRC32` when generating module analysis cache file name
- This remove the loading of `System.Security.Cryptography.Algorithms.dll` at startup
- Move `ConvertFrom-SddlString` to C# to remove the `Utility.psm1` file.
- Crossgen `Microsoft.ApplicationInsights.dll` and enable tiered compilation
- Even pwsh with crossgen assemblies spends a lot time in jitting at the startup, about `191.6ms` comparing with `24.7ms` for Windows PowerShell.
- Jitting `Microsoft.ApplicationInsights.dll` takes about `51.6ms`.
- By crossgen `Microsoft.ApplicationInsights.dll` and enable tiered compilation, the jitting time drops to about `98.9ms`.
Update psrp and libpsl reference to Microsoft.PowerShell.Native
Keep the reference to powershell.myget.org in nuget.config for PSDesiredStateConfiguration and PowerShellHelpFiles
Update hosting tests
Update hosting.tests.csproj in preparation on next release with version 6.1.0-rc.1
Update Microsoft.Management.Infrastructure to version 1.0.0
The main purpose of this was to enable full symbols for windows release build.
Also makes explicit where we are optimizing and where we are not optimizing due to https://github.com/dotnet/corefx/issues/29700
* Build Update
- Change `TargetFramework` to `netcoreapp2.1` and removed unnecessary `RuntimeFrameworkVersion` from `PowerShell.Common.props`
- Update dotnet SDK to 2.1.300-rc1-008662
- Update `TypeGen` target in `Build.psm1` to work with 2.1
- Rename macOS runtime to `osx-x64` as the old build logic expects 10.12 and breaks running on 10.13 system.
- Remove `PackageReference` to `System.Memory` as it's part of dotnetcore 2.1
- Update search for `crossgen` executable to find the matching version
* Test Update
- Update test tools `WebListener` to latest `asp.net core`
- Marked `AuthHeader Redirect` tests as `Pending` due to change in CoreFX
Since a PR added support to opt out of telemetry via an environment variable, we can remove the,
always intended to be a temporary, solution of deleting a file to opt out of telemetry since the
environment variable can be defined at the system level and exist before even installing PowerShell Core.
Because the variable is defined as opt out, a value of true, yes, or 1 means no telemetry is sent.
Instead of building PSReadLine from this repo, pull it from the gallery using nuget cache.
This pulls v2.0 of PSReadLine which does have documented breaking changes from v1.2, but the risk is small - the features that have changed are typically only used in a profile and aren't used all that often anyway.
Fix#996
Hardcodes version of modules pulled from PSGallery
* remove pester module
* restore Pester as a module only in CI build from the git repo
* mark appveyor builds as CI builds
* remove pester exclusions
* mark travis builds as ci
* exclude publish folder from spell check
* do not run spell check on publish folder
- Build PowerShell.Core.Instrumentation.dll - Resource-only binary for the ETW resources.
- Create a registration script for registering/unregistering the ETW provider.
- Rename powershell.exe to pwsh.exe
- Fixe appveyor.psm1
- Update MSI to include 'pwsh' in path and app paths
- Revert change for hyper-v powershell direct
- Update names in packaging.psm1.
- Fix check for SxS
The code in `AssemblyLoadContext.dll` doesn't need to be in a separate DLL anymore.
S.M.A.dll depends on `AssemblyLoadContext.dll`, so keeping that code out of S.M.A.dll doesn't help make S.M.A smaller size or less dependent. So the code in `AssemblyLoadContext.dll` is moved to `S.M.A.dll` and then we remove `AssemblyLoadContext.dll`.
The changes are:
- Move `CorePsAssemblyLoadContext.cs` to `src\S.M.A\CoreCLR\`
- Update `CorePsAssemblyLoadContext.cs` to get the test took moved to `Utils.InternalTestHooks` and update tests
- Update `build.psm1` and `.csproj` accrodingly
- Update `pwrshcommon.cpp` to remove `AssemblyLoadContext.dll` from the TPA list.
- `S.M.A.AssemblyExtensions` is removed as `PackageManagement` has finished their move to .NET Core 2.0. (I will work with Bryan to get the latest version uploaded to powershell-core)
There are following major changes:
- `Start-PSBootstrap -BuildWindowsNative` installs the native dependencies required for building PSRP binary. Without `-BuildWindowsNative`, it only installs the dotnet-SDK on Windows platform.
- `Start-PSBuild` doesn't build Windows PSRP binary. Instead, `Start-BuildNativeWindowsBinaries` is added to build it. After the build, 3 files (`'pwrshplugin.dll'`, `'pwrshplugin.pdb'`, `'Install-PowerShellRemoting.ps1'`) will be bin-placed at `src\powershell-win-core` like before.
- The NuGet package `'psrp.windows'` is added to `powershell-core` feed, and we reference it in `powershell-win-core.csproj` to get the Windows PSRP related files. Files (.dll and .pdb) in the package are from the beta.4 release build.
This change is only for Windows and appends the Windows PowerShell PSModulePath on startup via a default profile. Depending on the data/feedback we get, we can decide what to do (opt-in vs opt-out) as we get closer to a release candidate.
`AssemblyVersion` and `FileVersion` are now inferred from the `Version` property, which is inferred by `VersionPrefix`. So now both `AssemblyVersion` and `FileVersion` are 6.0.0.0 for each of PowerShell assemblies, and the `ProductVersion` and `InformationalVersion` are 6.0.0.
* Update assemblies versions by MSBuild and create a new PowerShellAssembly.props file to consolidate properties.
* Move import on first place
* Move to "6.0.0-beta.3"