import platform import os from ..subprocess_code_interpreter import SubprocessCodeInterpreter class PowerShell(SubprocessCodeInterpreter): file_extension = "ps1" proper_name = "PowerShell" def __init__(self): super().__init__() # Determine the start command based on the platform (use "powershell" for Windows) if platform.system() == 'Windows': self.start_cmd = 'powershell.exe' #self.start_cmd = os.environ.get('SHELL', 'powershell.exe') else: self.start_cmd = os.environ.get('SHELL', 'bash') def preprocess_code(self, code): return preprocess_powershell(code) def line_postprocessor(self, line): return line def detect_active_line(self, line): if "## active_line " in line: return int(line.split("## active_line ")[1].split(" ##")[0]) return None def detect_end_of_execution(self, line): return "## end_of_execution ##" in line def preprocess_powershell(code): """ Add active line markers Wrap in try-catch block Add end of execution marker """ # Add commands that tell us what the active line is code = add_active_line_prints(code) # Wrap in try-catch block for error handling code = wrap_in_try_catch(code) # Add end marker (we'll be listening for this to know when it ends) code += '\nWrite-Output "## end_of_execution ##"' return code def add_active_line_prints(code): """ Add Write-Output statements indicating line numbers to a PowerShell script. """ lines = code.split('\n') for index, line in enumerate(lines): # Insert the Write-Output command before the actual line lines[index] = f'Write-Output "## active_line {index + 1} ##"\n{line}' return '\n'.join(lines) def wrap_in_try_catch(code): """ Wrap PowerShell code in a try-catch block to catch errors and display them. """ try_catch_code = """ try { $ErrorActionPreference = "Stop" """ return try_catch_code + code + "\n} catch {\n Write-Error $_\n}\n"