594bdacb6a
- Better comments - Better indentation - Working directory agnostic (uses `$PSScriptRoot`) - Does not `cd` - `PSPackage` does not call `PSBuild` - Asserts that `bin/powershell` exists - Derives version from `git describe` if not given - Version parameter now a string to support metadata |
||
---|---|---|
docs | ||
package | ||
src | ||
test | ||
.gitignore | ||
.gitmodules | ||
.travis.yml | ||
appveyor.yml | ||
build.FullCLR.ps1 | ||
build.ps1 | ||
build.sh | ||
CONTRIBUTING.md | ||
debug.sh | ||
global.json | ||
KNOWNISSUES.md | ||
monad-docker.sh | ||
nuget.config | ||
omibuild.sh | ||
pester.sh | ||
PowerShellGitHubDev.psm1 | ||
psrp.sh | ||
README.md | ||
xunit.sh |
PowerShell on Linux / OS X / Windows
Ubuntu 14.04 | Windows | |
---|---|---|
master |
Waffle.io scrum board
Obtain the source code
Setup Git
Install Git, the version control system.
sudo apt-get install git
If you do not have a preferred method of authentication, enable the storage credential helper, which will cache your credentials in plaintext on your system, so use a token.
git config --global credential.helper store
See the Contributing Guidelines for more Git information.
Download source code
Clone this repository recursively, as it's the superproject with a number of submodules.
git clone --recursive https://github.com/PowerShell/PowerShell.git
The src/omi
submodule requires your GitHub user to have joined the Microsoft
organization. If it fails to check out, Git will bail and not check out further
submodules either. Please follow the instructions on the Open Source Hub.
On Windows, many fewer submodules are needed, so don't use clone --recursive
.
Instead run:
git clone https://github.com/PowerShell/PowerShell.git
git submodule update --init --recursive -- src/monad src/windows-build test/Pester
Setup build environment
We use the .NET Command Line Interface (dotnet
) to build
the managed components, and CMake to build the native components (on
non-Windows platforms). Install dotnet
by following their documentation.
The version of .NET CLI is very important, you want a recent 1.0.0 beta (not 1.0.1). The following instructions will install precisely 1.0.0.001425, though any 1.0.0 version should work.
Previous installations of DNX,
dnvm
, or older installations of .NET CLI can cause odd failures when running. Please check your version.
Linux
Tested on Ubuntu 14.04.
sudo sh -c 'echo "deb [arch=amd64] http://apt-mo.trafficmanager.net/repos/dotnet/ trusty main" > /etc/apt/sources.list.d/dotnetdev.list'
sudo apt-key adv --keyserver apt-mo.trafficmanager.net --recv-keys 417A0893
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install dotnet=1.0.0.001425-1
Then install the following additional build / debug tools:
sudo apt-get install g++ cmake make lldb-3.6 strace
OMI
To develop on the PowerShell Remoting Protocol (PSRP) for Linux, you'll need to be able to compile OMI, which additionally requires:
sudo apt-get install libpam0g-dev libssl-dev libcurl4-openssl-dev libboost-filesystem-dev
Windows
Tested on Windows 10 and Windows Server 2012 R2.
An MSI installer also exists, but this script avoids touching your system.
Invoke-WebRequest -Uri https://raw.githubusercontent.com/dotnet/cli/rel/1.0.0/scripts/obtain/install.ps1 -OutFile install.ps1
./install.ps1 -version 1.0.0.001425 -channel beta
OS X
The OS X dependency installation instructions are not yet documented. You can try their PKG installer, or their obtain script. We do not (yet) routinely test on OS X, but some developers use PowerShell on 10.10 and 10.11.
Building
The command dotnet restore
must be done at least once from the top directory
to obtain all the necessary .NET packages.
Build with ./build.sh
on Linux and OS X, ./build.ps1
for Core PowerShell on
Windows, and ./build.FullCLR.ps1
for Full PowerShell on Windows.
Specifically:
Linux
In Bash:
cd PowerShell
dotnet restore
./build.sh
Windows
In PowerShell:
cd PowerShell
dotnet restore
./build.ps1
Running
If you encounter any problems, see the known issues, otherwise open a new issue on GitHub.
The local managed host has built-in documentation via --help
.
Linux / OS X
- launch local shell with
./bin/powershell
- run tests with
./pester.sh
Windows
- launch
./bin/powershell.exe
- run tests with
./bin/powershell.exe -c "Invoke-Pester test/powershell"
PowerShell Remoting Protocol
PSRP communication is tunneled through OMI using the omi-provider
.
PSRP has been observed working on OS X, but the changes made to OMI to accomplish this are not even beta-ready and need to be done correctly. They exist on the
andschwa-osx
branch of the OMI repository.
Building
PSRP support is not built by ./build.sh
Build with ./omibuild.sh
.
Running
Some initial setup on Windows is required. Open an administrative command prompt and execute the following:
winrm set winrm/config/Client @{AllowUnencrypted="true"}
winrm set winrm/config/Client @{TrustedHosts="*"}
You can also set the
TrustedHosts
to include the target's IP address.
Then on Linux, launch omiserver
in the debugger (after building with the
instructions above):
./psrp.sh
run
The
run
command is executed inside of LLDB (the debugger) to start theomiserver
process.
Now in a PowerShell prompt on Windows (opened after setting the WinRM client configurations):
Enter-PSSession -ComputerName <IP address of Linux machine> -Credential $cred -Authentication basic
The
$cred
variable can be empty; a credentials prompt will appear, enter any fake credentials you wish as authentication is not yet implemented.
The IP address of the Linux machine can be obtained with:
ip -f inet addr show dev eth0
Desired State Configuration
DSC support is in its infancy.
DSC also uses OMI, so build it first, then build DSC against it. Unfortunately, DSC cannot be configured to look for OMI elsewhere, so for now you need to symlink it to the expected location.
ln -s ../omi/Unix/ omi-1.0.8
./configure --no-rpm --no-dpkg --local
make -j
Detailed Build Script Notes
This sections explains the build scripts.
The variable $BIN
is the output directory, bin
.
Managed
Builds with dotnet
. Publishes all dependencies into the bin
directory.
Emits its own native host as bin/powershell
. Uses a Linux
configuration to
add a preprocessor definition. The CORECLR
definition is added only when
targeting the netstandard1.5
framework. The LINUX
definition is added only
when --configuration Linux
is used.
cd src/Microsoft.PowerShell.Linux.Host
dotnet publish --configuration Linux
Native
The libpsl-native.so
library consists of native functions that
CorePsPlatform.cs
P/Invokes.
libpsl-native
Driven by CMake, with its own unit tests using Google Test.
cd src/libpsl-native
cmake -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Debug .
make -j
ctest -V
# Deploy development copy of libpsl-native
cp native/libpsl-native.* $BIN
The output is a .so
on Linux and .dylib
on OS X. It is unnecessary for Windows.
PSRP
OMI
Build OMI from source in developer mode:
cd src/omi/Unix
./configure --dev
make -j
Provider
The provider uses CMake to build, link, and register with OMI.
cd src/omi-provider
cmake .
make -j
The provider also maintains its own native host library to initialize the CLR, but there are plans to refactor .NET's packaged host as a shared library.
FullCLR PowerShell
On Windows, we also build Full PowerShell for .NET 4.5.1
Setup environment
- You need Visual Studio to compile the native host
powershell.exe
.
If you don't have any visual studio installed, you can use Visual Studio 2013 Community edition.
- Add
msbuild
toPATH
/ create PowerShell alias to it.
Set-Alias msbuild C:\WINDOWS\Microsoft.NET\Framework\v4.0.30319\MSBuild.exe
- Install CMake and add it to
PATH.
You can install it from [Chocolatey][] or manually.
choco install cmake.portable
- Install dotnet-cli via their documentation
Building
.\build.FullCLR.ps1
Troubleshooting: the build logic is relatively simple and contains following steps:
- building managed DLLs:
dotnet publish --runtime dnx451
- generating Visual Studio project:
cmake -G "$cmakeGenerator"
- building
powershell.exe
from generated solution:msbuild powershell.sln
All this steps can be run separately from .\build.FullCLR.ps1
, don't hesitate
to experiment.
Running
Running FullCLR version is not as simple as CoreCLR version.
If you just run , you will get a .\binFull\powershell.exe
powershell
process, but all the interesting DLLs (i.e. System.Management.Automation.dll
)
would be loaded from the GAC, not your binFull
build directory.
@lzybkr wrote a module to deal with it and run side-by-side.
Import-Module .\PowerShellGithubDev.psm1
Start-DevPSGithub -binDir $pwd\binFull
Troubleshooting: default for powershell.exe
that we build is x86.
There is a separate execution policy registry key for x86, and it's likely that
you didn't bypass enable it. From powershell.exe (x86) run:
Set-ExecutionPolicy Bypass
Running from CI server
We publish an archive with FullCLR bits on every CI build with AppVeyor.
- Download zip package from artifacts tab of the particular build.
- Unblock zip file: right-click in file explorer -> properties -> check 'Unblock' checkbox -> apply
- Extract zip file to
$bin
directory Start-DevPSGithub -binDir $bin