qfarm /load command shows me the load from my servers.
Output:
PS> qfarm /load
Server Name Server Load Load Throttling Load Logon Mode
-------------------- ----------- -------------------- ------------------
SERVER-01 400 0 AllowLogons
SERVER-02 1364 OFF AllowLogons
SERVER-03 1364 OFF AllowLogons
SERVER-04 1000 0 AllowLogons
SERVER-05 700 0 AllowLogons
SERVER-06 1200 0 AllowLogons
I need to display only first column (Server Name) and the second one (Server Load) and loop through them, in order to make some logic later, but it seems the powershell doesn't see it as object with properties:
PS> qfarm /load | Select -ExpandProperty "Server Name"
Select-Object : Property "Server Name" cannot be found.
Is there any other possibility, like a table or something?
One way to do this is to build objects out of the command's output. Tested the following:
#requires -version 3
# sample data output from command
$sampleData = @"
Server Name Server Load Load Throttling Load Logon Mode
-------------------- ----------- -------------------- ------------------
SERVER-01 400 0 AllowLogons
SERVER-02 1364 OFF AllowLogons
SERVER-03 1364 OFF AllowLogons
SERVER-04 1000 0 AllowLogons
SERVER-05 700 0 AllowLogons
SERVER-06 1200 0 AllowLogons
"@ -split "`n"
$sampleData | Select-Object -Skip 2 | ForEach-Object {
$len = $_.Length
[PSCustomObject] @{
"ServerName" = $_.Substring(0, 22).Trim()
"ServerLoad" = $_.Substring(22, 13).Trim() -as [Int]
"LoadThrottlingLoad" = $_.Substring(35, 22).Trim()
"LogonMode" = $_.Substring(57, $len - 57).Trim()
}
}
In your case, you should be able to replace $sampleData with your qfarm load command; e.g.:
qfarm /load | Select-Object -Skip 2 | ForEach-Object {
...
Of course, this is assuming no blank lines in the output and that my column positions for the start of each item is correct.
PowerShell version 2 equivalent:
#requires -version 2
function Out-Object {
param(
[Collections.Hashtable[]] $hashData
)
$order = @()
$result = @{}
$hashData | ForEach-Object {
$order += ($_.Keys -as [Array])[0]
$result += $_
}
New-Object PSObject -Property $result | Select-Object $order
}
# sample data output from command
$sampleData = @"
Server Name Server Load Load Throttling Load Logon Mode
-------------------- ----------- -------------------- ------------------
SERVER-01 400 0 AllowLogons
SERVER-02 1364 OFF AllowLogons
SERVER-03 1364 OFF AllowLogons
SERVER-04 1000 0 AllowLogons
SERVER-05 700 0 AllowLogons
SERVER-06 1200 0 AllowLogons
"@ -split "`n"
$sampleData | Select-Object -Skip 2 | ForEach-Object {
$len = $_.Length
Out-Object `
@{"ServerName" = $_.Substring(0, 22).Trim()},
@{"ServerLoad" = $_.Substring(22, 13).Trim() -as [Int]},
@{"LoadThrottlingLoad" = $_.Substring(35, 22).Trim()},
@{"LogonMode" = $_.Substring(57, $len - 57).Trim()}
}
You can easily convert your table to PowerShell objects using the ConvertFrom-SourceTable cmdlet from the PowerShell Gallery:
Install-Script -Name ConvertFrom-SourceTable
$sampleData = ConvertFrom-SourceTable @"
Server Name Server Load Load Throttling Load Logon Mode
-------------------- ----------- -------------------- ------------------
SERVER-01 400 0 AllowLogons
SERVER-02 1364 OFF AllowLogons
SERVER-03 1364 OFF AllowLogons
SERVER-04 1000 0 AllowLogons
SERVER-05 700 0 AllowLogons
SERVER-06 1200 0 AllowLogons
"@
And than select your columns like:
PS C:\> $SampleData | Select-Object "Server Name", "Server Load"
Server Name Server Load
----------- -----------
SERVER-01 400
SERVER-02 1364
SERVER-03 1364
SERVER-04 1000
SERVER-05 700
SERVER-06 1200
For details see: ConvertFrom-SourceTable -?
The ConvertFrom-SourceTable cmdlet is available for download at the PowerShell Gallery and the source code from the GitHub iRon7/ConvertFrom-SourceTable repository.
If you love us? You can donate to us via Paypal or buy me a coffee so we can maintain and grow! Thank you!
Donate Us With