New-Event
Creates a new event.
Syntax
New-Event
[-SourceIdentifier] <String>
[[-Sender] <PSObject>]
[[-EventArguments] <PSObject[]>]
[[-MessageData] <PSObject>]
[<CommonParameters>]
Description
The New-Event
cmdlet creates a new custom event.
You can use custom events to notify users about state changes in your program and any change that your program can detect, including hardware or system conditions, application status, disk status, network status, or the completion of a background job.
Custom events are automatically added to the event queue in your session whenever they are raised;
you do not need to subscribe to them. However, if you want to forward an event to the local session
or specify an action to respond to the event, use the Register-EngineEvent
cmdlet to subscribe to
the custom event.
When you subscribe to a custom event, the event subscriber is added to your session. If you cancel
the event subscription by using the Unregister-Event
cmdlet, the event subscriber and custom event
are deleted from the session. If you do not subscribe to the custom event, to delete the event, you
must change the program conditions or close the PowerShell session.
Examples
Example 1: Create a new event in the event queue
PS C:\> New-Event -SourceIdentifier Timer -Sender windows.timer -MessageData "Test"
This command creates a new event in the PowerShell event queue. It uses a Windows.Timer object to send the event.
Example 2: Raise an event in response to another event
PS C:\> function Enable-ProcessCreationEvent
{
$Query = New-Object System.Management.WqlEventQuery "__InstanceCreationEvent", (New-Object TimeSpan 0,0,1), "TargetInstance isa 'Win32_Process'"
$ProcessWatcher = New-Object System.Management.ManagementEventWatcher $Query
$Identifier = "WMI.ProcessCreated"
Register-ObjectEvent $ProcessWatcher "EventArrived" -SupportEvent $Identifier -Action
{
[void] (New-Event -SourceID "PowerShell.ProcessCreated" -Sender $Args[0] -EventArguments $Args[1].SourceEventArgs.NewEvent.TargetInstance)
}
}
This sample function uses the New-Event
cmdlet to raise an event in response to another event. The
command uses the Register-ObjectEvent
cmdlet to subscribe to the Windows Management
Instrumentation (WMI) event that is raised when a new process is created. The command uses the
Action parameter of the cmdlet to call the New-Event
cmdlet, which creates the new event.
Because the events that New-Event
raises are automatically added to the PowerShell event queue,
you do not need to register for that event.
Parameters
-EventArguments
Specifies an object that contains options for the event.
Type: | PSObject[] |
Position: | 2 |
Default value: | None |
Required: | False |
Accept pipeline input: | False |
Accept wildcard characters: | False |
-MessageData
Specifies additional data associated with the event. The value of this parameter appears in the MessageData property of the event object.
Type: | PSObject |
Position: | 3 |
Default value: | None |
Required: | False |
Accept pipeline input: | False |
Accept wildcard characters: | False |
-Sender
Specifies the object that raises the event. The default is the PowerShell engine.
Type: | PSObject |
Position: | 1 |
Default value: | None |
Required: | False |
Accept pipeline input: | False |
Accept wildcard characters: | False |
-SourceIdentifier
Specifies a name for the new event. This parameter is required, and it must be unique in the session.
The value of this parameter appears in the SourceIdentifier property of the events.
Type: | String |
Position: | 0 |
Default value: | None |
Required: | True |
Accept pipeline input: | False |
Accept wildcard characters: | False |
Inputs
None
You can't pipe objects to this cmdlet.
Outputs
Notes
The new custom event, the event subscription, and the event queue exist only in the current session. If you close the current session, the event queue is discarded and the event subscription is canceled.