While it is relatively easy to do something like this
activate "Windows".CommandOut("cmd /c echo Hello World!", $1)
and it is also possible to run a Powershell script with something like this
activate "Windows".Command( "cmd /c start /wait /b /min %%"%%" powershell -ExecutionPolicy Bypass -Command %%"Write-Output (Hello World)%%" | Out-File temp.txt " )
I have been unable to find a way to use CommandOut to capture Powershell output. Has anybody else encountered and resolved this issue? I have tried Write-Host, Write-Output and a few other variations but it does not appear that Powershell output goes where CommandOut can access it.
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Harjit Batra
IT Director
Rocket Forum Shared Account
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