Write-Information
Specifies how PowerShell handles information stream data for a command.
Syntax
Write-Information
[-MessageData] <Object>
[[-Tags] <String[]>]
[<CommonParameters>]
Description
The
Write-Information
cmdlet specifies how PowerShell handles information stream data for a
command.
Windows PowerShell 5.0 introduces a new, structured information stream. You can use this stream to
transmit structured data between a script and its callers or the host application.
Write-Information
lets you add an informational message to the stream, and specify how PowerShell
handles information stream data for a command. Information streams also work for
PowerShell.Streams
, jobs, and scheduled tasks.
Note
The information stream does not follow the standard convention of prefixing its messages with "[Stream Name]:". This was intended for brevity and visual cleanliness.
The
$InformationPreference
preference variable value determines whether the message you provide to
Write-Information
is displayed at the expected point in a script's operation. Because the default
value of this variable is
SilentlyContinue
, by default, informational messages are not shown.
If you don't want to change the value of
$InformationPreference
, you can override its value by
adding the
InformationAction
common parameter to your command. For more information, see
about_Preference_Variables
and
about_CommonParameters
.
Note
Starting in Windows PowerShell 5.0,
Write-Host
is a wrapper for
Write-Information
This allows
you to use
Write-Host
to emit output to the information stream. This enables the capture or
suppression of data written using
Write-Host
while preserving backwards compatibility. For more
information see
Write-Host
Write-Information
is also a supported workflow activity in Windows PowerShell 5.1.
Examples
Example 1: Write information for Get- results
In this example, you show an informational message, "Processes starting with 'P'", before running
the
Get-Process
command to find all processes that have a
Name
value that starts with 'p'.
Because the
$InformationPreference
variable is still set to its default,
SilentlyContinue
, you
add the
InformationAction
parameter to override the
$InformationPreference
value, and show the
message. The
InformationAction
value is
Continue
, which means that your message is shown,
but the script or command continues, if it is not yet finished.
Write-Information -MessageData "Processes starting with 'P'" -InformationAction Continue
Get-Process -Name p*
Processes starting with 'P'
18 19.76 15.16 0.00 6232 0 PFERemediation
20 8.92 25.15 0.00 24944 0 policyHost
9 1.77 7.64 0.00 1780 0 powercfg
10 26.67 32.18 0.00 7028 0 powercfg
8 26.55 31.59 0.00 13600 0 powercfg
9 1.66 7.55 0.00 22620 0 powercfg
21 6.17 4.54 202.20 12536 1 PowerMgr
42 84.26 12.71 2,488.84 20588 1 powershell
27 47.07 45.38 2.05 25988 1 powershell
27 24.45 5.31 0.00 12364 0 PresentationFontCache
92 112.04 13.36 82.30 13176 1 pwsh
106 163.73 93.21 302.25 14620 1 pwsh
227 764.01 92.16 1,757.22 25328 1 pwsh
Example 2: Write information and tag it
In this example, you use
Write-Information
to let users know they'll need to run another command
after they're done running the current command. The example adds the tag
"Instructions"
to the
informational message. After running this command, when you search the information stream for
messages tagged
"Instructions"
, the message is in the results.
$message = "To filter your results for PowerShell, pipe your results to the Where-Object cmdlet."
Get-Process -Name p*
Write-Information -MessageData $message -Tags "Instructions" -InformationAction Continue
NPM(K) PM(M) WS(M) CPU(s) Id SI ProcessName
------ ----- ----- ------ -- -- -----------
18 19.76 15.16 0.00 6232 0 PFERemediation
20 8.92 25.15 0.00 24944 0 policyHost
9 1.77 7.64 0.00 1780 0 powercfg
10 26.67 32.18 0.00 7028 0 powercfg
8 26.55 31.59 0.00 13600 0 powercfg
9 1.66 7.55 0.00 22620 0 powercfg
21 6.17 4.54 202.20 12536 1 PowerMgr
42 84.26 12.71 2,488.84 20588 1 powershell
27 47.07 45.38 2.05 25988 1 powershell
27 24.45 5.31 0.00 12364 0 PresentationFontCache
92 112.04 13.36 82.30 13176 1 pwsh
106 163.73 93.21 302.25 14620 1 pwsh
227 764.01 92.16 1,757.22 25328 1 pwsh
To filter your results for PowerShell, pipe your results to the Where-Object cmdlet.
Example 3: Write information to a file
In this example, you redirect the information stream in the function to
Info.txt
using the code
6>
. When you open the
Info.txt
file, you see the text "Here you go."
function Test-Info
{
Get-Process P*
Write-Information "Here you go"
}
Test-Info 6> Info.txt
Example 4: Pass object to write information
In this example, you can use
Write-Information
to write the top 10 highest
CPU utilization processes from the
Get-Process
object output that has passes
through multiple pipelines.
Get-Process | Sort-Object CPU -Descending |
Select-Object Id, ProcessName, CPU -First 10 |
Write-Information -InformationAction Continue
@{Id=12692; ProcessName=chrome; CPU=39431.296875}
@{Id=21292; ProcessName=OUTLOOK; CPU=23991.875}
@{Id=10548; ProcessName=CefSharp.BrowserSubprocess; CPU=20546.203125}
@{Id=312848; ProcessName=Taskmgr; CPU=13173.1875}
@{Id=10848; ProcessName=SnapClient; CPU=7014.265625}
@{Id=9760; ProcessName=Receiver; CPU=6792.359375}
@{Id=12040; ProcessName=Teams; CPU=5605.578125}
@{Id=498388; ProcessName=chrome; CPU=3062.453125}
@{Id=6900; ProcessName=chrome; CPU=2546.9375}
@{Id=9044; ProcessName=explorer; CPU=2358.765625}
Parameters
-MessageData
Specifies an informational message that you want to display to users as they run a script or command. For best results, enclose the informational message in quotation marks.
Type: | Object |
Aliases: | Msg, Message |
Position: | 0 |
Default value: | None |
Accept pipeline input: | True |
Accept wildcard characters: | False |
-Tags
Specifies a simple string that you can use to sort and filter messages that you have added to the
information stream with
Write-Information
. This parameter works similarly to the
Tags
parameter in
New-ModuleManifest
.
Type: | String [ ] |
Position: | 1 |
Default value: | None |
Accept pipeline input: | False |
Accept wildcard characters: | False |
Inputs
Object
You can pipe objects to pass to the information stream to this cmdlet.
Outputs
None
This cmdlet returns no output. It only writes to the information message stream.