functions/get-d365compilerresult.ps1
<# .SYNOPSIS Get the compiler outputs presented .DESCRIPTION Get the compiler outputs presented in a structured manner on the screen It could be a Visual Studio compiler log or it could be a Invoke-D365ModuleCompile log you want analyzed .PARAMETER Path Path to the compiler log file that you want to work against A BuildModelResult.log or a Dynamics.AX.*.xppc.log file will both work .PARAMETER ErrorsOnly Instructs the cmdlet to only output compile results where there was errors detected .PARAMETER OutputTotals Instructs the cmdlet to output the total errors and warnings after the analysis .EXAMPLE PS C:\> Get-D365CompilerResult -Path "c:\temp\d365fo.tools\Custom\Dynamics.AX.Custom.xppc.log" This will analyze the compiler log file for warning and errors. A result set example: File Warnings Errors ---- -------- ------ c:\temp\d365fo.tools\Custom\Dynamics.AX.Custom.xppc.log 2 1 .EXAMPLE PS C:\> Get-D365CompilerResult -Path "c:\temp\d365fo.tools\Custom\Dynamics.AX.Custom.xppc.log" -ErrorsOnly This will analyze the compiler log file for warning and errors, but only output if it has errors. A result set example: File Warnings Errors ---- -------- ------ c:\temp\d365fo.tools\Custom\Dynamics.AX.Custom.xppc.log 2 1 .EXAMPLE PS C:\> Get-D365Module -Name *Custom* | Invoke-D365ModuleCompile | Get-D365CompilerResult -OutputTotals This will find all modules with Custom in their name. It will pass thoses modules into the Invoke-D365ModuleCompile, which will compile them. It will pass the paths to each compile output log to Get-D365CompilerResult, which will analyze them for warning and errors. It will output the total number of warning and errors found. File Warnings Errors ---- -------- ------ c:\temp\d365fo.tools\Custom\Dynamics.AX.Custom.xppc.log 2 1 Total Errors: 1 Total Warnings: 2 .NOTES Tags: Compiler, Build, Errors, Warnings, Tasks Author: Mötz Jensen (@Splaxi) This cmdlet is inspired by the work of "Vilmos Kintera" (twitter: @DAXRunBase) All credits goes to him for showing how to extract these information His blog can be found here: https://www.daxrunbase.com/blog/ The specific blog post that we based this cmdlet on can be found here: https://www.daxrunbase.com/2020/03/31/interpreting-compiler-results-in-d365fo-using-powershell/ The github repository containing the original scrips can be found here: https://github.com/DAXRunBase/PowerShell-and-Azure #> function Get-D365CompilerResult { [CmdletBinding()] [OutputType('[PsCustomObject]')] param ( [parameter(Mandatory = $true, ValueFromPipeline = $true, ValueFromPipelineByPropertyName = $true)] [Alias('LogFile')] [string] $Path, [switch] $ErrorsOnly, [switch] $OutputTotals ) begin { Invoke-TimeSignal -Start $outputCollection = New-Object System.Collections.Generic.List[System.Object] } process { if (-not (Test-PathExists -Path $Path -Type Leaf)) { return } $res = Get-CompilerResult -Path $Path if ($null -ne $res) { $outputCollection.Add($res) } } end { $totalErrors = 0 $totalWarnings = 0 $resCol = @($outputCollection.ToArray()) $totalWarnings = ($resCol | Measure-Object -Property Warnings -Sum).Sum $totalErrors = ($resCol | Measure-Object -Property Errors -Sum).Sum if($ErrorsOnly) { $resCol = @($resCol | Where-Object Errors -gt 0) } $resCol | format-table File, @{Label = "Warnings"; Expression = { $e = [char]27; $color = "93"; "$e[${color}m$($_.Warnings)${e}[0m" }; Align = 'right' }, @{Label = "Errors"; Expression = { $e = [char]27; $color = "91"; "$e[${color}m$($_.Errors)${e}[0m" }; Align = 'right' } if ($OutputTotals) { Write-PSFHostColor -String "<c='Red'>Total Errors: $totalErrors</c>" Write-PSFHostColor -String "<c='Yellow'>Total Warnings: $totalWarnings</c>" } Invoke-TimeSignal -End } } |