Powershell runs all external commands in a new window, omitting output The 2019 Stack Overflow...
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Powershell runs all external commands in a new window, omitting output
The 2019 Stack Overflow Developer Survey Results Are InPowerShell script, showing commands runSometimes PowerShell stops sending output until I press enter. Why?PowerShell window preventing shutdownPowerShell Start-Job outputWhy powershell runs executables in separate window?How can I merge the output of two amost identical powershell commands?Duplicate current powershell session in a new windowStore two commands output to a variable in powershellPowershell - how to log all external cmd output?WMIC commands in powershell
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As described in the subject, my powershell environment is executing all external commands in separate windows. In a typical test run of my team's build script, this includes things like:
- nuget.exe running for each project in a sln
- nunit test runners
It's quite aggravating. The behavior actually prevents me from multi-tasking while running psake builds, since it grabs my mouse/keyboard focus whenever a new window appears/disapears. It also swallows valuable output from assorted steps in our build process.
As per https://stackoverflow.com/questions/8181490/powershell-suddenly-opens-cmd-exe-for-executing-bats, I checked $env:PATHEXT, but it is set up correctly (includes .EXE in its items, which are a semicolon-delimited list).
I am the only member of the team seeing this behavior, and it appears to be associated with some global/roaming profile for my user, as it is still happening even after I re-imaged my machine.
Any help would be greatly appreciated and I can provide additional info upon request.
windows powershell
bumped to the homepage by Community♦ 6 mins ago
This question has answers that may be good or bad; the system has marked it active so that they can be reviewed.
add a comment |
As described in the subject, my powershell environment is executing all external commands in separate windows. In a typical test run of my team's build script, this includes things like:
- nuget.exe running for each project in a sln
- nunit test runners
It's quite aggravating. The behavior actually prevents me from multi-tasking while running psake builds, since it grabs my mouse/keyboard focus whenever a new window appears/disapears. It also swallows valuable output from assorted steps in our build process.
As per https://stackoverflow.com/questions/8181490/powershell-suddenly-opens-cmd-exe-for-executing-bats, I checked $env:PATHEXT, but it is set up correctly (includes .EXE in its items, which are a semicolon-delimited list).
I am the only member of the team seeing this behavior, and it appears to be associated with some global/roaming profile for my user, as it is still happening even after I re-imaged my machine.
Any help would be greatly appreciated and I can provide additional info upon request.
windows powershell
bumped to the homepage by Community♦ 6 mins ago
This question has answers that may be good or bad; the system has marked it active so that they can be reviewed.
Could you please include a sample script that demonstrates the problem you're experiencing? It's important to see exactly how you're calling cmdlets and the params you're using.
– Colyn1337
Apr 28 '14 at 14:18
add a comment |
As described in the subject, my powershell environment is executing all external commands in separate windows. In a typical test run of my team's build script, this includes things like:
- nuget.exe running for each project in a sln
- nunit test runners
It's quite aggravating. The behavior actually prevents me from multi-tasking while running psake builds, since it grabs my mouse/keyboard focus whenever a new window appears/disapears. It also swallows valuable output from assorted steps in our build process.
As per https://stackoverflow.com/questions/8181490/powershell-suddenly-opens-cmd-exe-for-executing-bats, I checked $env:PATHEXT, but it is set up correctly (includes .EXE in its items, which are a semicolon-delimited list).
I am the only member of the team seeing this behavior, and it appears to be associated with some global/roaming profile for my user, as it is still happening even after I re-imaged my machine.
Any help would be greatly appreciated and I can provide additional info upon request.
windows powershell
As described in the subject, my powershell environment is executing all external commands in separate windows. In a typical test run of my team's build script, this includes things like:
- nuget.exe running for each project in a sln
- nunit test runners
It's quite aggravating. The behavior actually prevents me from multi-tasking while running psake builds, since it grabs my mouse/keyboard focus whenever a new window appears/disapears. It also swallows valuable output from assorted steps in our build process.
As per https://stackoverflow.com/questions/8181490/powershell-suddenly-opens-cmd-exe-for-executing-bats, I checked $env:PATHEXT, but it is set up correctly (includes .EXE in its items, which are a semicolon-delimited list).
I am the only member of the team seeing this behavior, and it appears to be associated with some global/roaming profile for my user, as it is still happening even after I re-imaged my machine.
Any help would be greatly appreciated and I can provide additional info upon request.
windows powershell
windows powershell
asked Apr 28 '14 at 13:09
olson.jefferyolson.jeffery
111
111
bumped to the homepage by Community♦ 6 mins ago
This question has answers that may be good or bad; the system has marked it active so that they can be reviewed.
bumped to the homepage by Community♦ 6 mins ago
This question has answers that may be good or bad; the system has marked it active so that they can be reviewed.
Could you please include a sample script that demonstrates the problem you're experiencing? It's important to see exactly how you're calling cmdlets and the params you're using.
– Colyn1337
Apr 28 '14 at 14:18
add a comment |
Could you please include a sample script that demonstrates the problem you're experiencing? It's important to see exactly how you're calling cmdlets and the params you're using.
– Colyn1337
Apr 28 '14 at 14:18
Could you please include a sample script that demonstrates the problem you're experiencing? It's important to see exactly how you're calling cmdlets and the params you're using.
– Colyn1337
Apr 28 '14 at 14:18
Could you please include a sample script that demonstrates the problem you're experiencing? It's important to see exactly how you're calling cmdlets and the params you're using.
– Colyn1337
Apr 28 '14 at 14:18
add a comment |
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
How are the scripts written? My first reaction would be to use Start-Process with the -NoNewWindiw parameter.
add a comment |
I experienced the same problem, and after a while found out that if the current working directory is deleted, you get this behavior: The commands are run in a separate command window.
So: Make sure that the working directory exists.
add a comment |
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2 Answers
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active
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2 Answers
2
active
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How are the scripts written? My first reaction would be to use Start-Process with the -NoNewWindiw parameter.
add a comment |
How are the scripts written? My first reaction would be to use Start-Process with the -NoNewWindiw parameter.
add a comment |
How are the scripts written? My first reaction would be to use Start-Process with the -NoNewWindiw parameter.
How are the scripts written? My first reaction would be to use Start-Process with the -NoNewWindiw parameter.
answered May 25 '14 at 16:00
Adam BertramAdam Bertram
2311211
2311211
add a comment |
add a comment |
I experienced the same problem, and after a while found out that if the current working directory is deleted, you get this behavior: The commands are run in a separate command window.
So: Make sure that the working directory exists.
add a comment |
I experienced the same problem, and after a while found out that if the current working directory is deleted, you get this behavior: The commands are run in a separate command window.
So: Make sure that the working directory exists.
add a comment |
I experienced the same problem, and after a while found out that if the current working directory is deleted, you get this behavior: The commands are run in a separate command window.
So: Make sure that the working directory exists.
I experienced the same problem, and after a while found out that if the current working directory is deleted, you get this behavior: The commands are run in a separate command window.
So: Make sure that the working directory exists.
answered Sep 12 '17 at 6:27
NilsNils
11
11
add a comment |
add a comment |
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Could you please include a sample script that demonstrates the problem you're experiencing? It's important to see exactly how you're calling cmdlets and the params you're using.
– Colyn1337
Apr 28 '14 at 14:18