Due to some limitations, I have to execute the Power Shell command from Windows Command Prompt
powershell -Command "(gc C:\my_configuration.conf) -replace 'INSERT_URL', \`"https://mytestserver/WW48.2'22/testing.bin\`" | Out-File C:\my_configuration.conf"
However, I am constantly getting the ParserError like below
The string is missing the terminator: '.
+ CategoryInfo : ParserError: (:) [], ParentContainsErrorRecordException
+ FullyQualifiedErrorId : TerminatorExpectedAtEndOfString
How should I properly wrap the URL string with double quotes? Thanks for answering.
Remove the ` before ", and your command should work; that is, when calling powershell.exe from cmd.exe / outside PowerShell, use \" , not \`" (or `") in order to escape " chars.:
powershell -Command "(gc C:\my_configuration.conf) -replace 'INSERT_URL', \"https://mytestserver/WW48.2'22/testing.bin\" | Out-File C:\my_configuration.conf"
While you do need to escape the " characters embedded in your overall "..." command string, escaping them as \" is sufficient - no need to also use `, the backtick, PowerShell's usual escape character.
The PowerShell CLI (powershell.exe) expects \-escaping of ", so as to better align with most CLIs, even though inside a PowerShell session you need to use `" or (inside "..." only) "".[1]
You'd only need both \ and ` - in the form `\", note that ` comes first - if your embedded "..." itself contained " chars; a contrived example:
:: OK: Prints '3" of snow.'
powershell.exe -c " Write-Output \"3`\" of snow.\" "
As iRon notes, an alternative solution is to use embedded '...' quoting (single-quoting) instead.
Since your URL itself contains a ' char., that character must then be escaped as '':
:: Note the use of '...' around https://... and the inner ' escaped as ''
powershell -Command "(gc C:\my_configuration.conf) -replace 'INSERT_URL', 'https://mytestserver/WW48.2''22/testing.bin' | Out-File C:\my_configuration.conf"
[1] In PowerShell (Core) 7+, whose CLI is pwsh.exe, you may alternatively use "" inside overall "..." on the command line too, which is actually the more robust choice when calling from cmd.exe. When calling powershell.exefromcmd.exe, the robust choice is "^""(sic) - see [this answer](https://stackoverflow.com/a/49060341/45375). However, the PowerShell CLI recognizes"in _both_ editions, and"also works for"chars. _not_ inside overall"..."`.
Try using this syntax, always works
"%windir%\System32\WindowsPowerShell\v1.0\powershell.exe" -Command "& { <# PUT ANYTHING HERE #> }"
You won't need to worry about escaping anything.
Your code:
"%windir%\System32\WindowsPowerShell\v1.0\powershell.exe" -Command "& { (gc C:\my_configuration.conf) -replace 'INSERT_URL', "https://mytestserver/WW48.2%2722/testing.bin" | Out-File 'C:\my_configuration.conf' }"
EDIT1: Check here for URL special characters. the single quote (') can be handled by its replacement (%27) in your hard-coded string. (I changed it above in the 2nd code sample)
On linux I can rappresent the / char in a different way:
${HOME:0:1}
So, for example, cat ${HOME:0:1}etc${HOME:0:1}passwd would be treated like cat /etc/passwd
Is there any way I can do the same thing on windows via powershell and cmd.exe for the backslash?
PowerShell has no equivalent to the parameter expansions available in POSIX-compatible shells such as Bash, of which your substring extraction (${HOME:0:1} to get the substring of length 1 at character position 0, i.e the first char. of the value of variable $HOME) is an example (link is to the Bash manual).
However, PowerShell makes it easy:
to embed the results of arbitrary expressions and even whole statements inside expandable (double-quoted) string ("..."), using $(...), the subexpression operator.
to pass the results of any expression or command (pipeline) as an argument to a command, by enclosing it in (...), the grouping operator.
The following command variations are equivalent, and dynamically use the platform-appropriate path (directory) separator, i.e. / on Unix-like platforms, and \ on Windows:
# -> '/etc/passwd' on Unix
# -> '\etc\passwd' on Windows
Write-Output "$([System.IO.Path]::DirectorySeparatorChar)etc$([System.IO.Path]::DirectorySeparatorChar)passwd"
# Ditto.
Write-Output ('{0}etc{0}passwd' -f [System.IO.Path]::DirectorySeparatorChar)
See also:
[System.IO.Path]::DirectorySeparatorChar
-f, the string format operator
How to set preference $ErrorView = "CategoryView" before start powershell.exe ?
powershell.exe -command "$ErrorView = "CategoryView" ; dir wrong.txt" doesnt work.
your code has a serious error in it. you used 4 double quotes instead of two on the outside and a pair of single quotes on the inside. [grin]
this works ...
powershell.exe -command "$ErrorView = 'CategoryView' ; dir wrong.txt; pause"
remove the pause when you are certain things are working as needed. [grin]
To complement Lee Dailey's helpful answer: As Lee points out, your primary problem is that you neglected to escape the " chars. embedded in your overall "..." command.
Assuming that you're calling your command from outside of PowerShell, such as from cmd.exe (Command Prompt):
Using embedded single-quoting ('...') in lieu of the embedded "..." is an option in this case, as shown in Lee's answer, because CategoryView is to be treated as a literal string.
Using ' for the embedded quoting conveniently obviates the need for escaping.
However, in cases where the embedded string contains variable references (e.g., $var) or expressions (e.g, $(Get-Date)), use of a double-quoted string ("...") is a must, because only double-quoted strings are expandable (interpolated). Escaping the embedded " as \" is then a must.
Note that, by contrast, inside PowerShell " chars. must be escaped as `".
# From cmd.exe, for instance.
C:\>powershell.exe -command "$ErrorView = \"CategoryView\"; dir wrong.txt"
If, for some reason, you must invoke another PowerShell instance from within PowerShell, use a script block ({ ... }), which also obviates the need for escaping (and better integrates with the calling session by returning objects from the invocation, not just strings).
# From Powershell.
PS> powershell.exe -command { $ErrorView = "CategoryView" ; dir wrong.txt }
A Perl system call must send the following string to the UnixShell:
'"XYZ"'
In my Perl script I have used the following command:
system("cleartool mkattr -replace ATTRIBUTE '"$attribute"' lbtype:$label");
Everything is well passed to the Shell Unix, except both uses of the quote character:
'
Indeed,
cleartool mkattr -replace ATTRIBUTE
The above command is passed as it is exactly what I want.
The Perl variables $attribute and $label are well interpreted.
But I don't know what to do to obtain exactly:
'"XYZ"'
Here XYZ is the value of the Perl variable $attribute
OS is AIX (Unix) and Shell is ksh. cleartool is the command line interface of Clearcase but no Clearcase skill is necessary to fix my problem.
If you want to execute a system command and don't have to use any shell syntax like redirects, it's usually better and safer to use the list form of system:
system(
'cleartool', 'mkattr', '-replace', 'ATTRIBUTE',
qq{"$attribute"}, qq{lbtype:$label}
);
# or, if you really want to pass both types of quotes:
system(
'cleartool', 'mkattr', '-replace', 'ATTRIBUTE',
qq{'"$attribute"'}, qq{lbtype:$label}
);
See perldoc -f system
It's not clear from your question if you want to pass '"XYZ"' or "XYZ".
See "Quote and Quote like Operators" and use qq{...}:
system(qq{cleartool mkattr -replace ATTRIBUTE '"$attribute"' lbtype:$label});
qq{...} is exactly like "..." except you can then use double quotes " in your string without escaping them.
You can use any character directly after the qq and must then use the same character to denote the end-of-string, i.e. qqX...X would work the same way. You would run into problems if your string contains Xes, so don't do that.
You can also use paired characters as delimiter ({}, (), <>) which is what you usually will see.
Recently I have been having some trouble using GnuWin32 from PowerShell whenever double quotes are involved.
Upon further investigation, it appears PowerShell is stripping double quotes from command line arguments, even when properly escaped.
PS C:\Documents and Settings\Nick> echo '"hello"'
"hello"
PS C:\Documents and Settings\Nick> echo.exe '"hello"'
hello
PS C:\Documents and Settings\Nick> echo.exe '\"hello\"'
"hello"
Notice that the double quotes are there when passed to PowerShell's echo cmdlet, but when passed as an argument to echo.exe, the double quotes are stripped unless escaped with a backslash (even though PowerShell's escape character is a backtick, not a backslash).
This seems like a bug to me. If I am passing the correct escaped strings to PowerShell, then PowerShell should take care of whatever escaping may be necessary for however it invokes the command.
What is going on here?
For now, the fix is to escape command line arguments in accordance with these rules (which seem to be used (indirectly) by the CreateProcess API call which PowerShell uses to invoke .exe files):
To pass a double quote, escape with a backslash: \" -> "
To pass a one or more backslashes followed by a double quote, escape each backslash with another backslash and escape the quote: \\\\\" -> \\"
If not followed by a double quote, no escaping is necessary for backslashes: \\ -> \\
Note that further escaping of double quotes may be necessary to escape the double quotes in the Windows API escaped string to PowerShell.
Here are some examples, with echo.exe from GnuWin32:
PS C:\Documents and Settings\Nick> echo.exe "\`""
"
PS C:\Documents and Settings\Nick> echo.exe "\\\\\`""
\\"
PS C:\Documents and Settings\Nick> echo.exe "\\"
\\
I imagine that this can quickly become hell if you need to pass a complicated command line parameter. Of course, none of this documented in the CreateProcess() or PowerShell documentation.
Also note that this is not necessary to pass arguments with double quotes to .NET functions or PowerShell cmdlets. For that, you need only escape your double quotes to PowerShell.
Edit: As Martin pointed out in his excellent answer, this is documented in the CommandLineToArgv() function (which the CRT uses to parse the command line arguments) documentation.
It is a known thing:
It's FAR TOO HARD to pass parameters to applications which require quoted strings. I asked this question in IRC with a "roomful" of PowerShell experts, and it took hour for someone to figure out a way (I originally started to post here that it is simply not possible). This completely breaks PowerShell's ability to serve as a general purpose shell, because we can't do simple things like executing sqlcmd. The number one job of a command shell should be running command-line applications... As an example, trying to use SqlCmd from SQL Server 2008, there is a -v parameter which takes a series of name:value parameters. If the value has spaces in it, you must quote it...
...there is no single way to write a command line to invoke this application correctly, so even after you master all 4 or 5 different ways of quoting and escaping things, you're still guessing as to which will work when ... or, you can just shell out to cmd, and be done with it.
TL;DR
If you just want a solution for Powershell 5, see:
ConvertTo-ArgvQuoteForPoSh.ps: Powershell V5 (and C# Code) to allow escaping native command arguments
The Question I will try to answer
..., it appears PowerShell is stripping double quotes from command
line arguments, even when properly escaped.
PS C:\Documents and Settings\Nick> echo.exe '"hello"'
hello
PS C:\Documents and Settings\Nick> echo.exe '\"hello\"'
"hello"
Notice that the double quotes are there when passed to PowerShell's
echo cmdlet, but when passed as an argument to echo.exe, the double
quotes are stripped unless escaped with a backslash (even though
PowerShell's escape character is a backtick, not a backslash).
This seems like a bug to me. If I am passing the correct escaped
strings to PowerShell, then PowerShell should take care of whatever
escaping may be necessary for however it invokes the command.
What is going on here?
The Non-Powershell Background
The fact that you need to escape the quotes with backslashes \ has nothing to to with powershell, but with the CommandLineToArgvW function that is used by all msvcrt and C# programs to build the argv array from the single-string command line that the Windows process gets passed.
The details are explained at Everyone quotes command line arguments the wrong way and it basically boils down to the fact that this function historically has very uninutitive escaping rules:
2n backslashes followed by a quotation mark produce n backslashes followed by begin/end quote. This does not become part of the parsed
argument, but toggles the "in quotes" mode.
(2n) + 1 backslashes followed by a quotation mark again produce n backslashes followed by a quotation mark literal ("). This does not
toggle the "in quotes" mode.
n backslashes not followed by a quotation mark simply produce n backslashes.
leading to the described generic escaping function (shortquote of the logic here):
CommandLine.push_back (L'"');
for (auto It = Argument.begin () ; ; ++It) {
unsigned NumberBackslashes = 0;
while (It != Argument.end () && *It == L'\\') {
++It;
++NumberBackslashes;
}
if (It == Argument.end ()) {
// Escape all backslashes, but let the terminating
// double quotation mark we add below be interpreted
// as a metacharacter.
CommandLine.append (NumberBackslashes * 2, L'\\');
break;
} else if (*It == L'"') {
// Escape all backslashes and the following
// double quotation mark.
CommandLine.append (NumberBackslashes * 2 + 1, L'\\');
CommandLine.push_back (*It);
} else {
// Backslashes aren't special here.
CommandLine.append (NumberBackslashes, L'\\');
CommandLine.push_back (*It);
}
}
CommandLine.push_back (L'"');
The Powershell specifics
Now, up to Powershell 5 (including PoSh 5.1.18362.145 on Win10/1909) PoSh knows basically diddly about these rules, nor should it arguably, because these rules are not really general, because any executable you call could, in theory, use some other means to interpret the passed command line.
Which leads us to -
The Powershell Quoting Rules
What PoSh does do however is try to figure out whether the strings you pass it as arguments to the native commands need to be quoted because they contain whitespace.
PoSh - in contrast to cmd.exe - does a lot more parsing on the command you hand it, since it has to resolve variables and knows about multiple arguments.
So, given a command like
$firs = 'whaddyaknow'
$secnd = 'it may have spaces'
$third = 'it may also have "quotes" and other \" weird \\ stuff'
EchoArgs.exe $firs $secnd $third
Powershell has to take a stance on how to create the single string CommandLine for the Win32 CreateProcess (or rather the C# Process.Start) call it will evetually have to do.
The approach Powershell takes is weird and got more complicated in PoSh V7 , and as far as I can follow, it's got to do how powershell treats unbalanced quotes in unquoted string. The long stories short is this:
Powershell will auto-quote (enclose in <">) a single argument
string, if it contains spaces and the spaces don't mix with an
uneven number of (unsescaped) double quotes.
The specific quoting rules of PoSh V5 make it impossible to pass a certain category of string as single argument to a child process.
PoSh V7 fixed this, so that as long as all quotes are \" escaped -- which they need to be anyway to get them through CommandLineToArgvW -- we can pass any aribtrary string from PoSh to a child executable that uses CommandLineToArgvW.
Here's the rules as C# code as extracted from the PoSh github repo for a tool class of ours:
PoSh Quoting Rules V5
public static bool NeedQuotesPoshV5(string arg)
{
// bool needQuotes = false;
int quoteCount = 0;
for (int i = 0; i < arg.Length; i++)
{
if (arg[i] == '"')
{
quoteCount += 1;
}
else if (char.IsWhiteSpace(arg[i]) && (quoteCount % 2 == 0))
{
// needQuotes = true;
return true;
}
}
return false;
}
PoSh Quoting Rules V7
internal static bool NeedQuotesPoshV7(string arg)
{
bool followingBackslash = false;
// bool needQuotes = false;
int quoteCount = 0;
for (int i = 0; i < arg.Length; i++)
{
if (arg[i] == '"' && !followingBackslash)
{
quoteCount += 1;
}
else if (char.IsWhiteSpace(arg[i]) && (quoteCount % 2 == 0))
{
// needQuotes = true;
return true;
}
followingBackslash = arg[i] == '\\';
}
// return needQuotes;
return false;
}
Oh yeah, and they also added in a half baked attempt to correctly escape the and of the quoted string in V7:
if (NeedQuotes(arg))
{
_arguments.Append('"');
// need to escape all trailing backslashes so the native command receives it correctly
// according to http://www.daviddeley.com/autohotkey/parameters/parameters.htm#WINCRULESDOC
_arguments.Append(arg);
for (int i = arg.Length - 1; i >= 0 && arg[i] == '\\'; i--)
{
_arguments.Append('\\');
}
_arguments.Append('"');
The Powershell Situation
Input to EchoArgs | Output V5 (powershell.exe) | Output V7 (pwsh.exe)
===================================================================================
EchoArgs.exe 'abc def' | Arg 0 is <abc def> | Arg 0 is <abc def>
------------------------------|-----------------------------|---------------------------
EchoArgs.exe '\"nospace\"' | Arg 0 is <"nospace"> | Arg 0 is <"nospace">
------------------------------|-----------------------------|---------------------------
EchoArgs.exe '"\"nospace\""' | Arg 0 is <"nospace"> | Arg 0 is <"nospace">
------------------------------|-----------------------------|---------------------------
EchoArgs.exe 'a\"bc def' | Arg 0 is <a"bc> | Arg 0 is <a"bc def>
| Arg 1 is <def> |
------------------------------|-----------------------------|---------------------------
...
I'm snipping further examples here for time reasons. They shouldn't add overmuch to the answer anyways.
The Powershell Solution
To pass arbitrary Strings from Powershell to a native command using CommandLineToArgvW, we have to:
properly escape all quotes and Backslashes in the source argument
This means recognizing the special string-end handling for backslashes that V7 has. (This part is not implemented in the code below.)
and determine whether powershell will auto-quote our escaped string and if it won't auto-quote it, quote it ourselves.
and make sure that the string we quoted ourselves then doesn't get auto-quoted by powershell: This is what breaks V5.
Powershell V5 Source code for correctly escaping all arguments to any native command
I've put the full code on Gist, as it got too long to include here: ConvertTo-ArgvQuoteForPoSh.ps: Powershell V5 (and C# Code) to allow escaping native command arguments
Note that this code tries it's best, but for some strings with quotes in the payload and V5 you simply must add in leading space to the arguments you pass. (See code for logic details).
I personally avoid using '\' to escape things in PowerShell, because it's not technically a shell escape character. I've gotten unpredictable results with it. In double-quoted strings, you can use "" to get an embedded double-quote, or escape it with a back-tick:
PS C:\Users\Droj> "string ""with`" quotes"
string "with" quotes
The same goes for single quotes:
PS C:\Users\Droj> 'string ''with'' quotes'
string 'with' quotes
The weird thing about sending parameters to external programs is that there is additional level of quote evaluation. I don't know if this is a bug, but I'm guessing it won't be changed, because the behavior is the same when you use Start-Process and pass in arguments. Start-Process takes an array for the arguments, which makes things a bit clearer, in terms of how many arguments are actually being sent, but those arguments seem to be evaluated an extra time.
So, if I have an array, I can set the argument values to have embedded quotes:
PS C:\cygwin\home\Droj> $aa = 'arg="foo"', 'arg=""""bar""""'
PS C:\cygwin\home\Droj> echo $aa
arg="foo"
arg=""""bar""""
The 'bar' argument has enough to cover the extra hidden evaluation. It's as if I send that value to a cmdlet in double-quotes, then send that result again in double-quotes:
PS C:\cygwin\home\Droj> echo "arg=""""bar""""" # level one
arg=""bar""
PS C:\cygwin\home\Droj> echo "arg=""bar""" # hidden level
arg="bar"
One would expect these arguments to be passed to external commands as-is, as they are to cmdlets like 'echo'/'write-output', but they are not, because of that hidden level:
PS C:\cygwin\home\Droj> $aa = 'arg="foo"', 'arg=""""bar""""'
PS C:\cygwin\home\Droj> start c:\cygwin\bin\echo $aa -nonew -wait
arg=foo arg="bar"
I don't know the exact reason for it, but the behavior is as if there is another, undocumented step being taken under the covers that re-parses the strings. For example, I get the same result if I send the array to a cmdlet, but add a parsing level by doing it through invoke-expression:
PS C:\cygwin\home\Droj> $aa = 'arg="foo"', 'arg=""""bar""""'
PS C:\cygwin\home\Droj> iex "echo $aa"
arg=foo
arg="bar"
...which is exactly what I get when I send these arguments to my external Cygwin instance's 'echo.exe':
PS C:\cygwin\home\Droj> c:\cygwin\bin\echo 'arg="foo"' 'arg=""""bar""""'
arg=foo arg="bar"
With PowerShell 7.2.0, it is finally possible for arguments passed to native executables to behave as expected. This is currently an experimental feature and needs to be enabled manually.
Enable-ExperimentalFeature PSNativeCommandArgumentPassing
After that edit your PSProfile, for example, using notepad:
notepad.exe $PROFILE
Add $PSNativeCommandArgumentPassing = 'Standard' to the top of the file. You may instead also use $PSNativeCommandArgumentPassing = 'Windows' which uses the Legacy behaviour for some native executables. The differences are documented in this pull request.
Finally, restart PowerShell. Command arguments will no longer have quotes removed.
The new behaviour can be verified with this little C program:
#include <stdio.h>
int main(int argc, char** argv) {
for (int i = 1; i < argc; i++) {
puts(argv[i]);
}
return 0;
}
Compile it with gcc and pass in some arguments with quotes, like a JSON string.
> gcc echo-test.c
> ./a.exe '{"foo": "bar"}'
With the Legacy behaviour, the output is {foo: bar}. However, with the Standard option, the output becomes {"foo": "bar"}.
Relying on the CMD to shell out the issue as indicated in the accepted answer didn't work for me as double quotes were still stripped out when calling the CMD executable.
The good solution for me was to structure my command line as an array of strings instead of a single full string containing all the arguments. Then simply pass that array as the arguments for the binary invocation:
$args = New-Object System.Collections.ArrayList
$args.Add("-U") | Out-Null
$args.Add($cred.UserName) | Out-Null
$args.Add("-P") | Out-Null
$args.Add("""$($cred.Password)""")
$args.Add("-i") | Out-Null
$args.Add("""$SqlScriptPath""") | Out-Null
& SQLCMD $args
In that case, double quotes surrounding arguments are properly passed to the invoked command.
If you need, you can test and debug it with EchoArgs from the PowerShell Community Extensions.
This seems to be fixed in recent versions of PowerShell at the time of this writing, so it is no longer something to worry about.
If you still think you see this issue, remember it may be related to something else, such as the program that invokes PowerShell, so if you cannot reproduce it when invoking PowerShell directly from a command prompt or the ISE, you should debug elsewhere.
For example, I found this question when investigating a problem of disappearing quotes when running a PowerShell script from C# code using Process.Start. The issue was actually C# Process Start needs Arguments with double quotes - they disappear.
Oh dear. Clearly trying to escape double quotes to get them into PowerShell from the command line, or worse, some other language you are using to generate such a command line, or execution environments which might chain PowerShell scripts, can be a colossal waste of time.
As an attempt at a practical solution, what can we do instead? Silly-looking workarounds can sometimes be effective:
powershell Write-Host "'say ___hi___'.Replace('___', [String][Char]34)"
But it depends a lot on how this is being executed. Note that if you want that command to have the same results when pasted in PowerShell instead of run from command prompt, you need those outer double quotes! Because the hosting Powershell turns the expression into a string object which becomes just one more parameter to 'powershell.exe'
PS> powershell Write-Host 'say ___hi___'.Replace('___', [String][Char]34)
Which then, I guess, parses its arguments as Write-Host say "hi"
So the quotes you are trying so hard to reintroduce with string.Replace() will just disappear!