Invoke-PSRule#
SYNOPSIS#
Evaluate objects against matching rules and output the results.
SYNTAX#
Input (Default)#
Invoke-PSRule [-Module <String[]>] [-Outcome <RuleOutcome>] [-As <ResultFormat>] [-Format <InputFormat>]
[-OutputPath <String>] [-OutputFormat <OutputFormat>] [-Baseline <BaselineOption>] [-Convention <String[]>]
[[-Path] <String[]>] [-Name <String[]>] [-Tag <Hashtable>] [-Option <PSRuleOption>] [-ObjectPath <String>]
[-TargetType <String[]>] [-Culture <String[]>] -InputObject <PSObject> [-WhatIf] [-Confirm]
[<CommonParameters>]
InputPath#
Invoke-PSRule -InputPath <String[]> [-Module <String[]>] [-Outcome <RuleOutcome>] [-As <ResultFormat>]
[-Format <InputFormat>] [-OutputPath <String>] [-OutputFormat <OutputFormat>] [-Baseline <BaselineOption>]
[-Convention <String[]>] [[-Path] <String[]>] [-Name <String[]>] [-Tag <Hashtable>] [-Option <PSRuleOption>]
[-ObjectPath <String>] [-TargetType <String[]>] [-Culture <String[]>] [-WhatIf] [-Confirm]
[<CommonParameters>]
DESCRIPTION#
Evaluate objects against matching rules and output the results. Objects can be specified directly from the pipeline or provided from file.
The commands Invoke-PSRule
and Assert-PSRule
provide similar functionality, as differ as follows:
Invoke-PSRule
writes results as structured objectsAssert-PSRule
writes results as a formatted string.
EXAMPLES#
Example 1#
@{ Name = 'Item 1' } | Invoke-PSRule;
Evaluate a simple hashtable on the pipeline against rules loaded from the current working path.
Example 2#
# Define objects to validate
$items = @();
$items += [PSCustomObject]@{ Name = 'Fridge' };
$items += [PSCustomObject]@{ Name = 'Apple' };
# Validate each item using rules saved in current working path
$items | Invoke-PSRule;
TargetName: Fridge
RuleName Outcome Recommendation
-------- ------- --------------
isFruit Fail Fruit is only Apple, Orange and Pear
TargetName: Apple
RuleName Outcome Recommendation
-------- ------- --------------
isFruit Pass Fruit is only Apple, Orange and Pear
Evaluate an array of objects on the pipeline against rules loaded from the current working path.
Example 3#
# Define objects to validate
$items = @();
$items += [PSCustomObject]@{ Name = 'Fridge' };
$items += [PSCustomObject]@{ Name = 'Apple' };
# Validate each item and only return failing results
$items | Invoke-PSRule -Outcome Fail;
TargetName: Fridge
RuleName Outcome Recommendation
-------- ------- --------------
isFruit Fail Fruit is only Apple, Orange and Pear
Evaluate an array of objects, only failing object results are returned.
Example 4#
# Define objects to validate
$items = @();
$items += [PSCustomObject]@{ Name = 'Fridge' };
$items += [PSCustomObject]@{ Name = 'Apple' };
# Validate each item and show rule summary
$items | Invoke-PSRule -As Summary;
RuleName Pass Fail Outcome
-------- ---- ---- -------
isFruit 1 1 Fail
Evaluate an array of objects. The results for each rule is returned as a summary. Outcome is represented as the worst outcome.
PARAMETERS#
-Name#
The name of a specific rule to evaluate. If this parameter is not specified all rules in search paths will be evaluated.
Type: String[]
Parameter Sets: (All)
Aliases: n
Required: False
Position: Named
Default value: None
Accept pipeline input: False
Accept wildcard characters: False
-Path#
One or more paths to search for rule definitions within.
Type: String[]
Parameter Sets: (All)
Aliases: p
Required: False
Position: 0
Default value: None
Accept pipeline input: False
Accept wildcard characters: False
-Outcome#
Filter output to only show rule results with a specific outcome.
Type: RuleOutcome
Parameter Sets: (All)
Aliases:
Accepted values: Pass, Fail, Error, None, Processed, All
Required: False
Position: Named
Default value: Pass, Fail, Error
Accept pipeline input: False
Accept wildcard characters: False
-Tag#
Only get rules with the specified tags set. If this parameter is not specified all rules in search paths will be returned.
When more than one tag is used, all tags must match. Tags are not case sensitive.
A tag value of *
may be used to filter rules to any rule with the tag set, regardless of tag value.
An array of tag values can be used to match a rule with either value.
i.e. severity = important, critical
matches rules with a category of either important
or critical
.
Type: Hashtable
Parameter Sets: (All)
Aliases:
Required: False
Position: Named
Default value: None
Accept pipeline input: False
Accept wildcard characters: False
-InputObject#
The pipeline object to process rules for.
Type: PSObject
Parameter Sets: Input
Aliases: TargetObject
Required: True
Position: Named
Default value: None
Accept pipeline input: True (ByValue)
Accept wildcard characters: False
-Option#
Additional options that configure execution.
A PSRuleOption
can be created by using the New-PSRuleOption
cmdlet.
Alternatively, a hashtable or path to YAML file can be specified with options.
For more information on PSRule options see about_PSRule_Options.
Type: PSRuleOption
Parameter Sets: (All)
Aliases:
Required: False
Position: Named
Default value: None
Accept pipeline input: False
Accept wildcard characters: False
-As#
The type of results to produce. Detailed results are generated by default.
The following result formats are available:
Detail
- Returns pass/ fail results for each rule per object.Summary
- Returns summarized results for the rule and the worst outcome.
Type: ResultFormat
Parameter Sets: (All)
Aliases:
Accepted values: Detail, Summary
Required: False
Position: Named
Default value: Detail
Accept pipeline input: False
Accept wildcard characters: False
-Format#
Configures the input format for when a string is passed in as a target object.
When the -InputObject
parameter or pipeline input is used, strings are treated as plain text by default.
Set this option to either Yaml
, Json
, Markdown
, PowerShellData
to have PSRule deserialize the object.
When the -InputPath
parameter is used with a file path or URL.
If the Detect
format is used, the file extension will be used to automatically detect the format.
When -InputPath
is not used, Detect
is the same as None
.
When this option is set to File
PSRule scans the path and subdirectories specified by -InputPath
.
Files are treated as objects instead of being deserialized.
Additional, PSRule uses the file extension as the object type.
When files have no extension the whole file name is used.
See about_PSRule_Options
for details.
This parameter takes precedence over the Input.Format
option if set.
Type: InputFormat
Parameter Sets: (All)
Aliases:
Accepted values: None, Yaml, Json, Markdown, PowerShellData, File, Detect
Required: False
Position: Named
Default value: Detect
Accept pipeline input: False
Accept wildcard characters: False
-Baseline#
Specifies an explicit baseline by name to use for evaluating rules. Baselines can contain filters and custom configuration that overrides the defaults.
Type: BaselineOption
Parameter Sets: (All)
Aliases:
Required: False
Position: Named
Default value: None
Accept pipeline input: False
Accept wildcard characters: False
-Convention#
Specifies conventions by name to execute in the pipeline when processing objects.
Type: String[]
Parameter Sets: (All)
Aliases:
Required: False
Position: Named
Default value: None
Accept pipeline input: False
Accept wildcard characters: False
-Culture#
Specifies the culture to use for rule documentation and messages. By default, the culture of PowerShell is used.
This option does not affect the culture used for the PSRule engine, which always uses the culture of PowerShell.
The PowerShell cmdlet Get-Culture
shows the current culture of PowerShell.
Type: String[]
Parameter Sets: (All)
Aliases:
Required: False
Position: Named
Default value: None
Accept pipeline input: False
Accept wildcard characters: False
-ObjectPath#
The name of a property to use instead of the pipeline object.
If the property specified by ObjectPath
is a collection or an array, then each item in evaluated separately.
Type: String
Parameter Sets: (All)
Aliases:
Required: False
Position: Named
Default value: None
Accept pipeline input: False
Accept wildcard characters: False
-TargetType#
Filters input objects by TargetType.
If specified, only objects with the specified TargetType are processed. Objects that do not match TargetType are ignored. If multiple values are specified, only one TargetType must match. This parameter is not case-sensitive.
By default, all objects are processed.
This parameter if set, overrides the Input.TargetType
option.
To change the field TargetType is bound to set the Binding.TargetType
option.
For details see the about_PSRule_Options help topic.
Type: String[]
Parameter Sets: (All)
Aliases:
Required: False
Position: Named
Default value: None
Accept pipeline input: False
Accept wildcard characters: False
-Module#
Search for rule definitions within a module.
If no sources are specified by -Path
, -Module
, or options, the current working directory is used.
Type: String[]
Parameter Sets: (All)
Aliases: m
Required: False
Position: Named
Default value: None
Accept pipeline input: False
Accept wildcard characters: False
-InputPath#
Instead of processing objects from the pipeline, import objects from the specified file paths.
Type: String[]
Parameter Sets: InputPath
Aliases: f
Required: True
Position: Named
Default value: None
Accept pipeline input: False
Accept wildcard characters: False
-OutputPath#
Specifies the output file path to write results. Directories along the file path will automatically be created if they do not exist.
Type: String
Parameter Sets: (All)
Aliases:
Required: False
Position: Named
Default value: None
Accept pipeline input: False
Accept wildcard characters: False
-OutputFormat#
Configures the format that output is presented in.
The following format options are available:
- None - Output is presented as an object using PowerShell defaults. This is the default.
- Yaml - Output is serialized as YAML.
- Json - Output is serialized as JSON.
- Markdown - Output is serialized as Markdown.
- NUnit3 - Output is serialized as NUnit3 (XML).
- Csv - Output is serialized as a comma separated values (CSV).
- Wide - Output is presented using the wide table format, which includes reason and wraps columns.
- Sarif - Output is serialized as SARIF.
Type: OutputFormat
Parameter Sets: (All)
Aliases: o
Accepted values: None, Yaml, Json, Markdown, NUnit3, Csv, Wide, Sarif
Required: False
Position: Named
Default value: None
Accept pipeline input: False
Accept wildcard characters: False
-Confirm#
Prompts you for confirmation before running the cmdlet.
Type: SwitchParameter
Parameter Sets: (All)
Aliases: cf
Required: False
Position: Named
Default value: None
Accept pipeline input: False
Accept wildcard characters: False
-WhatIf#
Shows what would happen if the cmdlet runs. The cmdlet is not run.
Type: SwitchParameter
Parameter Sets: (All)
Aliases: wi
Required: False
Position: Named
Default value: None
Accept pipeline input: False
Accept wildcard characters: False
CommonParameters#
This cmdlet supports the common parameters: -Debug, -ErrorAction, -ErrorVariable, -InformationAction, -InformationVariable, -OutVariable, -OutBuffer, -PipelineVariable, -Verbose, -WarningAction, and -WarningVariable. For more information, see about_CommonParameters.
INPUTS#
System.Management.Automation.PSObject#
You can pipe any object to Invoke-PSRule.
OUTPUTS#
PSRule.Rules.RuleRecord#
This is the default.
PSRule.Rules.RuleSummaryRecord#
When you use the -As Summary
. Otherwise, it returns a RuleRecord
object.