Azure pipelines powershell - Kabrinskiy Eduard
<h1>Azure pipelines powershell</h1>
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<h1>Azure DevOps Pipelines: PowerShell Task</h1>
<p>This is going to be a quick post that shows the use of the PowerShell task in a Pipeline. Nothing in the post is really specific to the Azure DevOps Project we have been using over the last few weeks, but just in case you?re totally new to Azure DevOps and/or this series you can use the following posts to get started.</p>
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<h3>PowerShell Task</h3>
<p>The PowerShell task will allow you to do pretty much anything. If there isn?t an existing DevOps task that fits your needs more than likely you can find a way to use the PowerShell task to accomplish what you need within the context of the computer the task is running on and even external computers that depending on your networking and security setup. The following is a sample task I added to a Pipeline that will output all the environment variables to the logs. This is an inline script, but you can also run scripts from files. Also, note that this works on both Windows and Linux agents.</p>
<p>While this script isn?t super useful for a production Pipeline I often use it when setting up a Pipeline to get a good feel for what is available variable wise. Also, keep in mind that depending on the trigger of the run these variables can be different. For example, if a run was triggered by a pull request you will have a number of pull request related variables. The following is the output of this command on my test project that was triggered via a pull request and therefore contains a bunch of SYSTEM_PULLREQUEST_x variables with information about the pull request. The agent was running Linux.</p>
<p>I don?t know about you but being able to see what paths the built-in path variables actually map to helps me a lot especially when files need to be moved around.</p>
<h3>Wrapping Up</h3>
<p>As stated above you can do just about anything with the PowerShell task. I have used it for everything from reading a JSON file to building a VM for QA. If you hadn?t used this task before I hope this post helped you get started and opened your eyes to the huge range of things you can do with the PowerShell task.</p>
<h2>Azure pipelines powershell</h2>
<h3>Azure pipelines powershell</h3>
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<h4>Azure pipelines powershell</h4>
Azure DevOps Pipelines: PowerShell Task This is going to be a quick post that shows the use of the PowerShell task in a Pipeline. Nothing in the post is really specific to the Azure DevOps
<h5>Azure pipelines powershell</h5>
Azure pipelines powershell <a href="http://remmont.com">Azure pipelines powershell</a> Azure pipelines powershell
SOURCE: <h6>Azure pipelines powershell</h6> <a href="https://dev-ops.engineer/">Azure pipelines powershell</a> Azure pipelines powershell
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