UseCompatibleCommands
Severity Level: Warning
Description
This rule identifies commands that are not available on a targeted PowerShell platform.
A PowerShell platform is identified by a name in the following format:
<os-name>_<os-arch>_<os-version>_<ps-version>_<ps-arch>_<dotnet-version>_<dotnet-edition>
Where:
<os-name>
: The name of the operating system PowerShell is running on. On Windows, this includes the SKU number. On Linux, this is the name of the distribution.<os-arch>
: The machine architecture the operating system is running on (this is usuallyx64
).<os-version>
: The self-reported version of the operating system (on Linux, this is the distribution version).<ps-version>
: The PowerShell version (from$PSVersionTable.PSVersion
).<ps-arch>
: The machine architecture of the PowerShell process.<dotnet-version>
: The reported version of the .NET runtime PowerShell is running on (fromSystem.Environment.Version
).<dotnet-edition>
: The .NET runtime flavor PowerShell is running on (currentlyframework
orcore
).
For example:
win-4_x64_10.0.18312.0_5.1.18312.1000_x64_4.0.30319.42000_framework
is PowerShell 5.1 running on Windows 10 Enterprise (build 18312) for x64.win-4_x64_10.0.18312.0_6.1.2_x64_4.0.30319.42000_core
is PowerShell 6.1.2 running on the same operating system.ubuntu_x64_18.04_6.2.0_x64_4.0.30319.42000_core
is PowerShell 6.2.0 running on Ubuntu 18.04.
Some platforms come bundled with PSScriptAnalyzer as JSON files, named in this way for targeting in your configuration.
Platforms bundled by default are:
PowerShell Version | Operating System | ID |
---|---|---|
3.0 | Windows Server 2012 | win-8_x64_6.2.9200.0_3.0_x64_4.0.30319.42000_framework |
4.0 | Windows Server 2012 R2 | win-8_x64_6.3.9600.0_4.0_x64_4.0.30319.42000_framework |
5.1 | Windows Server 2016 | win-8_x64_10.0.14393.0_5.1.14393.2791_x64_4.0.30319.42000_framework |
5.1 | Windows Server 2019 | win-8_x64_10.0.17763.0_5.1.17763.316_x64_4.0.30319.42000_framework |
5.1 | Windows 10 Pro | win-48_x64_10.0.17763.0_5.1.17763.316_x64_4.0.30319.42000_framework |
6.2 | Ubuntu 18.04 LTS | ubuntu_x64_18.04_6.2.4_x64_4.0.30319.42000_core |
6.2 | Windows 10.0.14393 | win-8_x64_10.0.14393.0_6.2.4_x64_4.0.30319.42000_core |
6.2 | Windows 10.0.17763 | win-8_x64_10.0.17763.0_6.2.4_x64_4.0.30319.42000_core |
6.2 | Windows 10.0.18362 | win-4_x64_10.0.18362.0_6.2.4_x64_4.0.30319.42000_core |
7.0 | Ubuntu 18.04 LTS | ubuntu_x64_18.04_7.0.0_x64_3.1.2_core |
7.0 | Windows 10.0.14393 | win-8_x64_10.0.14393.0_7.0.0_x64_3.1.2_core |
7.0 | Windows 10.0.17763 | win-8_x64_10.0.17763.0_7.0.0_x64_3.1.2_core |
7.0 | Windows 10.0.18362 | win-4_x64_10.0.18362.0_7.0.0_x64_3.1.2_core |
Other profiles can be found in the GitHub repo.
You can also generate your own platform profile using the PSCompatibilityCollector module.
The compatibility profile settings takes a list of platforms to target under TargetProfiles
. A
platform can be specified as:
- A platform name (like
ubuntu_x64_18.04_6.1.1_x64_4.0.30319.42000_core
), which will have.json
added to the end and is searched for in the default profile directory. - A filename (like
my_custom_platform.json
), which will be searched for the in the default profile directory. - An absolute path to a file (like
D:\PowerShellProfiles\TargetMachine.json
).
The default profile directory is under the PSScriptAnalzyer module at
$PSScriptRoot/compatibility_profiles
(where $PSScriptRoot
here refers to the directory
containing PSScriptAnalyzer.psd1
).
The compatibility analysis compares a command used to both a target profile and a 'union' profile (containing all commands available in any profile in the profile dir). If a command is not present in the union profile, it is assumed to be locally created and ignored. Otherwise, if a command is present in the union profile but not present in a target, it is deemed to be incompatible with that target.
Configuration settings
Configuration key | Meaning | Accepted values | Mandatory | Example |
---|---|---|---|---|
Enable |
Activates the rule | bool ($true /$false ) |
No (default: $false ) |
$true |
TargetProfiles |
The list of PowerShell profiles to target | string[]: absolute paths to profile files or names of profiles in the profile directory | No (default: @() ) |
@('ubuntu_x64_18.04_6.1.3_x64_4.0.30319.42000_core', 'win-48_x64_10.0.17763.0_5.1.17763.316_x64_4.0.30319.42000_framework') |
ProfileDirPath |
The location to search for profiles by name and use for union profile generation | string: absolute path to new profile dir | No (defaults to compatibility_profiles directory in PSScriptAnalyzer module |
C:\Users\me\Documents\pssaCompatProfiles |
IgnoreCommands |
Commands to ignore compatibility of in scripts | string[]: names of commands to ignore | No (default: @() ) |
@('Get-ChildItem','Import-Module') |
An example configuration might look like:
@{
Rules = @{
PSUseCompatibleCommands = @{
Enable = $true
TargetProfiles = @(
'ubuntu_x64_18.04_6.1.3_x64_4.0.30319.42000_core'
'win-48_x64_10.0.17763.0_5.1.17763.316_x64_4.0.30319.42000_framework'
'MyProfile'
'another_custom_profile_in_the_profiles_directory.json'
'D:\My Profiles\profile1.json'
)
# You can specify commands to not check like this, which also will ignore its parameters:
IgnoreCommands = @(
'Install-Module'
)
}
}
}
Suppression
Command compatibility diagnostics can be suppressed with an attribute on the param
block of a
scriptblock as with other rules.
[System.Diagnostics.CodeAnalysis.SuppressMessageAttribute('PSUseCompatibleCommands', '')]
The rule can also be suppressed only for particular commands:
[System.Diagnostics.CodeAnalysis.SuppressMessageAttribute('PSUseCompatibleCommands',
'Start-Service')]
And also suppressed only for parameters:
[System.Diagnostics.CodeAnalysis.SuppressMessageAttribute('PSUseCompatibleCommands',
'Import-Module/FullyQualifiedName')]