How can I change the following code to look at all the .log files in the directory and not just the one file?
I need to loop through all the files and delete all lines that do not contain "step4" or "step9". Currently this will create a new file, but I'm not sure how to use the for each
loop here (newbie).
The actual files are named like this: 2013 09 03 00_01_29.log. I'd like the output files to either overwrite them, or to have the SAME name, appended with "out".
$In = "C:\Users\gerhardl\Documents\My Received Files\Test_In.log"
$Out = "C:\Users\gerhardl\Documents\My Received Files\Test_Out.log"
$Files = "C:\Users\gerhardl\Documents\My Received Files\"
Get-Content $In | Where-Object {$_ -match 'step4' -or $_ -match 'step9'} | `
Set-Content $Out
If you need to loop inside a directory recursively for a particular kind of file, use the below command, which filters all the files of
doc
file type$fileNames = Get-ChildItem -Path $scriptPath -Recurse -Include *.doc
If you need to do the filteration on multiple types, use the below command.
$fileNames = Get-ChildItem -Path $scriptPath -Recurse -Include *.doc,*.pdf
Now
$fileNames
variable act as an array from which you can loop and apply your business logic.To get the content of a directory you can use
Then you can loop over this variable as well:
Other answers are great, I just want to add... a different approach usable in PowerShell: Install GNUWin32 utils and use grep to view the lines / redirect the output to file http://gnuwin32.sourceforge.net/
This overwrites the new file every time:
This appends the log output, in case you overwrite the logIn file and want to keep the data:
Note: to be able to use GNUWin32 utils globally you have to add the bin folder to your system path.
Give this a try: