Could someone clarify how sls (Select-String) works compared to grep and findstr?
grep: grep <pattern> files.txt
sls: sls <pattern> files.txt
(default parameter position for sls is pattern then file)
grep examples: grep "search text" *.log
; cat *.log | grep "search text"
sls examples: sls "search text" *.log
; cat *.log | grep "search text"
As an aside, all PowerShell Cmdlets are case-insensitive, unlike Linux tools which are generally always case-sensitive but also older tools like findstr which are case sensitive too, but findstr can be used in PowerShell, and works in situations where sls does not, for example: Get-Service | findstr "Sec"
(this works without a problem!), but when we try to use sls in a similar way Get-Service | sls "Sec"
we get nothing (presumably this fails because sls works with strings, but Get-Service returns an object, so that's understandable - but what is findstr doing then in that it can see the output as a string?).
So, my thinking is "ok, I need to make the output from Get-Service into a string to work with PowerShell Cmdlets", but that doesn't work (or not in a way that I would expect):
Get-Service | Out-String | sls "Sec"
(gives results, but odd)
(Get-Service).ToString() | sls "Sec"
(.ToString() just returns "System.Object[]")
How in general should I turn an object into a string so that it can manipulate the information (in the same way that Get-Service | findstr "Sec"
can do so easily)?
Would appreciate if someone could clarify how things fit together in the above so that I can make more use of sls. In particular, Get-Service | Out-String | sls "Sec"
does return stuff, just not the stuff I was expecting (is it searching for each character of "s" and "e" and "c" so is returning lots - that would not be very intuitive if so in my opinion)?
See Question&Answers more detail:
os 与恶龙缠斗过久,自身亦成为恶龙;凝视深渊过久,深渊将回以凝视…