This is a fork of PSDepend as the master repo appears to have been abandoned
I've created this so I fix some issues that are causing me pain. such as os detection not working correctly ps7 on windows. Please submit Issues/PR's if you encounter issues.
This is a simple PowerShell dependency handler. You might loosely compare it to bundle install
in the Ruby world or pip install -r requirements.txt
in the Python world.
PSDepend allows you to write simple requirements.psd1 files that describe what dependencies you need, which you can invoke with Invoke-PSDepend
WARNING:
- Minimal testing. This is in my backlog, but PRs would be welcome!
- This borrows quite heavily from PSDeploy. There may be leftover components that haven't been adapted, have been improperly adapted, or shouldn't have been adapted
- Would love ideas, feedback, pull requests, etc., but if you rely on this, consider pinning a specific version to avoid hitting breaking changes.
# PowerShell 5
Install-Module PSDepend
# PowerShell 3 or 4, curl|bash bootstrap. Read before running something like this : )
iex (new-object System.Net.WebClient).DownloadString('https://raw.githubusercontent.com/RamblingCookieMonster/PSDepend/master/Examples/Install-PSDepend.ps1')
# Git
# Download the repository
# Unblock the zip
# Extract the PSDepend folder to a module path (e.g. $env:USERPROFILE\Documents\WindowsPowerShell\Modules\)
# Import and start exploring
Import-Module PSDepend
Get-Command -Module PSDepend
Get-Help about_PSDepend
In-depth:
Recipes:
Store dependencies in a PowerShell data file, and use *.depend.psd1 or requirements.psd1 to allow Invoke-PSDepend to find your files for you.
What does a dependency file look like?
Here's the simplest syntax. If this meets your needs, you can stop here:
@{
psake = 'latest'
Pester = 'latest'
BuildHelpers = '0.0.20' # I don't trust this Warren guy...
PSDeploy = '0.1.21' # Maybe pin the version in case he breaks this...
'RamblingCookieMonster/PowerShell' = 'master'
}
And what PSDepend sees:
DependencyName DependencyType Version Tags
-------------- -------------- ------- ----
psake PSGalleryModule latest
BuildHelpers PSGalleryModule 0.0.20
Pester PSGalleryModule latest
RamblingCookieMonster/PowerShell GitHub master
PSDeploy PSGalleryModule 0.1.21
There's a bit more behind the scenes - we assume you want PSGalleryModules or GitHub repos unless you specify otherwise, and we hide a few dependency properties.
We can also indicate the dependency type more explicitly if desired:
@{
'PSGalleryModule::InvokeBuild' = 'latest'
'GitHub::RamblingCookieMonster/PSNeo4j' = 'master'
}
What else can we put in a dependency? Here's an example using a more flexible syntax. You can mix and match.
@{
psdeploy = 'latest'
buildhelpers_0_0_20 = @{
Name = 'buildhelpers'
DependencyType = 'PSGalleryModule'
Parameters = @{
Repository = 'PSGallery'
SkipPublisherCheck = $true
}
Version = '0.0.20'
Tags = 'prod', 'test'
PreScripts = 'C:\RunThisFirst.ps1'
DependsOn = 'some_task'
}
some_task = @{
DependencyType = 'task'
Target = 'C:\RunThisFirst.ps1'
DependsOn = 'nuget'
}
nuget = @{
DependencyType = 'FileDownload'
Source = 'https://dist.nuget.org/win-x86-commandline/latest/nuget.exe'
Target = 'C:\nuget.exe'
}
}
This example illustrates using a few different dependency types, using DependsOn to sort things (e.g. some_task runs after nuget), tags, and other options.
You can inspect the full output as needed. For example:
# List the dependencies, get the third item, show all props
$Dependency = Get-Dependency \\Path\To\complex.depend.ps1
$Dependency[2] | Select *
DependencyFile : \\Path\To\complex.depend.psd1
DependencyName : buildhelpers_0_0_20
DependencyType : PSGalleryModule
Name : buildhelpers
Version : 0.0.20
Parameters : {Repository,SkipPublisherCheck}
Source :
Target :
AddToPath :
Tags : {prod, test}
DependsOn : some_task
PreScripts : C:\RunThisFirst.ps1
PostScripts :
Raw : {Version, Name, Tags, DependsOn...}
Note that we replace certain strings in Target and Source fields:
- $PWD (or .) refer to the current path
- $ENV:USERPROFILE, $ENV:TEMP, $ENV:ProgramData, $ENV:APPDATA
- Variables need to be in single quotes or the $ needs to be escaped. We replace the raw strings with the values for you. This will not work: Target = "$PWD\dependencies". This will: Target = '$PWD\dependencies'
- If you call Invoke-PSDepend -Target $Something, we override any value for target
- Thanks to Mike Walker for the idea!
If you are using a PowerShell module repository that requires authentication then add those to your dependency. When working with credentials there are two parts we need to consider:
- Credential property of our dependency.
- Credentials parameter for Invoke-PSDepend.
@{
psdeploy = 'latest'
buildhelpers_0_0_20 = @{
Name = 'buildhelpers'
DependencyType = 'PSGalleryModule'
Parameters = @{
Repository = 'PSGallery'
SkipPublisherCheck = $true
}
Version = '0.0.20'
Credential = 'must_match'
}
}
Now create a PSCredential
object with the credentials to access the repository and run it:
Invoke-PSDepend -Path C:\requirements.psd1 -Credentials @{ 'must_match' = $creds }
Make sure whatever you use as must_match
is the same in the dependency as it is in the hashtable you pass to the Credentials parameter.
Each DependencyType - PSGalleryModule, FileDownload, Task, etc. - might treat these standard properties differently, and may include their own Parameters. For example, in the BuildHelpers node above, we specified a Repository and SkipPublisherCheck parameters.
How do we find out what these mean? First things first, let's look at what DependencyTypes we have available:
Get-PSDependType
DependencyType Description DependencyScript
-------------- ----------- ----------------
PSGalleryModule Install a PowerShell module from the PowerShell Gallery. C:\...\PSDepend\PSDepen...
Task Support dependencies by handling simple tasks. C:\...\PSDepend\PSDepen...
Noop Display parameters that a depends script would receive... C:\...\PSDepend\PSDepen...
FileDownload Download a file C:\...\PSDepend\PSDepen...
Now that we know what types are available, we can read the comment-based help. Hopefully the author took their time to write this:
Get-PSDependType -DependencyType PSGalleryModule -ShowHelp
...
DESCRIPTION
Installs a module from a PowerShell repository like the PowerShell Gallery.
Relevant Dependency metadata:
Name: The name for this module
Version: Used to identify existing installs meeting this criteria, and as RequiredVersion for installation. Defaults to 'latest'
Target: Used as 'Scope' for Install-Module. If this is a path, we use Save-Module with this path. Defaults to 'AllUsers'
PARAMETERS
...
-Repository <String>
PSRepository to download from. Defaults to PSGallery
-SkipPublisherCheck <Switch>
Bypass the catalog signing check. Defaults to $false
In this example, we see how PSGalleryModule treats the Name, Version, and Target in a depend.psd1, and we see Parameter's specific to this DependencyType, 'Repository' and 'SkipPublisherCheck'
Finally, we have a few about topics, and individual commands have built in help:
Get-Help about_PSDepend
Get-Help about_PSDepend_Definitions
Get-Help Get-Dependency -Full
PSDepend is extensible. To create a new dependency type:
- Pick a name. We'll use
Nothing
as an example - Create
DependencyType.ps1
(substituting in your name, e.g.Nothing.ps1
) in the PSDependScripts folder - Your
DependencyType.ps1
(Nothing.ps1
in this example) should...- Have comment based help
- Include details on how you use Dependency metadata. For example, in Git.ps1,
Version
is used in git checkout - Include a PSDependAction parameter that takes
Install
,Test
,Import
, or a subset of these. Example parameter declaration - Depending on which PSDependAction is specified by the user, your script should
install
,test
(return true or false depending on whether the dependency exists - sometimes this is impossible to check), andimport
(import the dependency - if appropriate, this might import a module or dot source code, for example)
- Add your new dependency type to PSDependMap.psd1
So! In our example, we would create PSDepend\PSDependScripts\Nothing.ps1
, with the following code:
<#
.SYNOPSIS
Example Dependency
.DESCRIPTION
Example Dependency
Relevant Dependency metadata:
Version: Used for nonsense output
.PARAMETER Dependency
Dependency to process
.PARAMETER StringParameter
An example parameter that does nothing
.PARAMETER PSDependAction
Test, Install, or Import the dependency. Defaults to Install
Test: Return true or false on whether the dependency is in place
Install: Install the dependency
Import: Import the dependency
#>
[cmdletbinding()]
param (
[PSTypeName('PSDepend.Dependency')]
[psobject[]]$Dependency,
[ValidateSet('Test', 'Install', 'Import')]
[string[]]$PSDependAction = @('Install'),
[string]$StringParameter
)
$Output = [PSCustomobject]@{
DependencyName = $Dependency.DependencyName
Status = "Invoking $PSDependAction action"
BoundParameters = $PSBoundParameters.Keys
Message = "Version [$Version]"
}
# Notice that we end the script if we're testing.
if( $PSDependAction -Contains 'Test' )
{
Write-Verbose $Output
return $true
}
$Output
Finally, we'll add an entry to PSDependMap.psd1
:
Nothing = @{
Script= 'Nothing.ps1'
Description = 'Example dependency'
}
Lastly, we'll define a requirements.psd1 using this dependency:
@{
ExampleDependency = @{
DependencyType = 'Nothing'
Version = 1
Parameters = @{
StringParameter = 'A thing'
}
}
}
Finally, run it!
Invoke-PSDepend -Path C:\requirements.psd1 -Test -Quiet
True
Invoke-PSDepend -Path C:\requirements.psd1
DependencyName Status BoundParameters Message
-------------- ------ --------------- -------
ExampleDependency Invoking Install action {StringParameter, PSDependAction, Dependency} Version [1]
Invoke-PSDepend -Path C:\requirements.psd1 -Import
DependencyName Status BoundParameters Message
-------------- ------ --------------- -------
ExampleDependency Invoking Import action {StringParameter, PSDependAction, Dependency} Version [1]
Major props to Michael Willis for the idea - check out his PSRequire, a similar but more feature-full solution.