ShouldProcess is something that a lot of folks get wrong, even some of the more seasoned scripters. Even some official modules don't quite handle it properly, perhaps most notably the Set-ADAccountPassword cmdlet from the ActiveDirectory module — more on that here — although it is more commonly seen in scripts and third-party modules. Let's take a look at some of the ways you can get it terribly wrong, and then how you need to be doing it.

What is ShouldProcess

ShouldProcess is a property that can be applied to the [CmdletBinding()] attribute, which is used by PowerShell to keep track of what is and isn't important, or more importantly, which commands may be dangerous to use. It indicates to the PowerShell subsystems that your function should be given two additional common parameters: -WhatIf and -Confirm .

Uses of ShouldProcess

ShouldProcess is an extremely helpful safeguard and discovery tool. If you have a command that you don't want to actually run but get a thorough idea of what it's doing that might be either important or potentially problematic, these common parameters are extremely helpful.

Get-ChildItem | Remove-Item -WhatIf Get-ChildItem | Clear-Content -Confirm

The former will simply list all the actions it would have taken, but never take any action. The latter instead pauses before every action and provides you with an interactive prompt asking if you want to proceed with the action.

Sometimes, however, you know exactly what you're doing, and you want to ensure that it simply does exactly what it's told without asking questions. For cmdlets which would normally prompt you for confirmation, you can specifically invoke it in "no-questions-asked" mode:

# Don't try this near important files! Get-ChildItem | Clear-Content -Confirm : $false

Problematic Implementation Patterns

Manually Defining -WhatIf or -Confirm

Top of the list has to be implementing a custom parameter for either -WhatIf or -Confirm .

function Get-Thing { param ( [ switch ] $WhatIf , [ switch ] $Confirm ) }

Common parameters exist so that they have a consistent definition, behaviour, and usage. There could be any number of custom implementations of these parameters, but not using the default leads only to confusion and an inability to trust any given -WhatIf parameter, especially in the absence of appropriate help documentation, which also tends to follow these common mis-implementations.

Not utilising the common parameters can also mean that applying, for example, -Confirm:$false to the parent function or script does not cascade down to the commands it runs; with the common parameters in place and being used appropriately, the parameters applied to the parent command are applied across the entire breadth of the actions of that command — if it calls a command that has support for ShouldProcess it will trigger the appropriate actions (or not, as it were) to be taken, as though you had painstakingly entered the same -WhatIf / -Confim values across all the other commands in your script or function.

Declaring Support For, but Not Supporting ShouldProcess

Next along the line seems to be the end result of skipping some of the more important parts of the documentation, or noticing someone else doing it and trying to copy them without understanding what is actually being done.

function Remove-Thing { [ CmdletBinding ( SupportsShouldProcess )] param () # Proceed to break _everything_ without asking }

It should be noted, however, that this is frequently a perfectly valid case for any commands that primarily just call other cmdlets or functions and do little else. In these cases, the parameter values supplied for the ShouldProcess parameters will be passed along to the inner cmdlet and function calls, for those commands that support it.

Miscategorising Your Function's ConfirmImpact

Finally, the last common mistake is over- or under-rating your cmdlet's ConfirmImpact . This can result in the user not being prompted by default when they should be. For example, not prompting before attempting to change potentially sensitive system settings or overwriting large numbers of files.

Providing Nonsense or Incorrect Prompts

I haven't seen this really done yet; most of the people who have explored far enough into writing a custom function know enough to avoid this almost instinctually.

Properly Implementing ShouldProcess

Before we can implement ShouldProcess for our function, we need to determine just how potentially dangerous the function is. Some functions simply don't need it. A majority of cmdlets with the Get verb don't need it, because they don't make any changes; they only retrieve data, and modify nothing.

Properly Selecting Your ConfirmImpact Rating

There are four levels of impact: Low , Medium , High , and None . When evaluating the ShouldProcess() method, a prompt will be generated only if the current command's ConfirmImpact is equal to or higher than the current $ConfirmPreference setting.

By default, $ConfirmPreference is set to High .

ConfirmImpact = "Low"

This action only needs to be confirmed when the user has requested that low-impact changes must be confirmed.

In general, reserve Low for actions that will never break anything important in any way, but may still involve an impactful change (e.g., deleting unimportant files, working with and altering low-risk stored data that you can be reasonably confident will be backed up anyway, altering user-level system settings).

ConfirmImpact = "Medium"

This action should be confirmed in most scenarios where confirmation is requested.

This is the default setting for a function that declares [CmdletBinding(SupportsShouldProcess)] without specifying a ConfirmImpact value. I would recommend avoiding just using the default and explicitly specifying your ConfirmImpact , even if it is Medium . It indicates to others that the author has put some thought into it and has probably taken the time to implement properly the complete ShouldProcess functionality.

Medium should be used for any system-wide settings changes, deleting folders (especially those containing files), or making several smaller changes in one go.

Note that despite the enum description, PowerShell's default ConfirmImpact is currently High , which means that Medium -level changes will not be prompted for unless the user has altered their default ConfirmPreference .

ConfirmImpact = "High"

This action is potentially highly "destructive" and should be confirmed by default unless otherwise specified.

Use this for any actions which cannot be reversed and may impact the environment adversely if misused. Use this also for any actions that take place on a larger scale than normal, for example if you are by design affecting a significant portion of the machines on a domain network, that action should be considered to have a High impact.

Coding For ShouldProcess Support

There are two things you need to do to implement ShouldProcess support in a function:

Set the SupportsShouldProcess and appropriate ConfirmImpact properties in your [CmdletBinding()] declaration. Test the result of the $PSCmdlet.ShouldProcess() method before making any changes to the system.

For the purposes of this example, we will write a simple and small file deletion cmdlet that utilises Remove-Item .

function Invoke-Decimation { [ CmdletBinding ( SupportsShouldProcess , ConfirmImpact = 'Medium' )] # Step 1 param ( [ Parameter ( Position = 0 )] [ ValidateNotNullOrEmpty ()] [ string ] $Path , [ switch ] $Recurse ) switch ( $Recurse . IsPresent ) { $true { # Step 2 if ( $PSCmdlet . ShouldContinue ( $Path , 'Decimate every file including subdirectories.' )) { Get-ChildItem -Path $Path -File -Recurse | Where-Object { ( Get-Random -Min 1 -Max 11 ) % 10 -eq 0 } | Remove-Item -Confirm : $false } } $false { # Step 2 if ( $PSCmdlet . ShouldProcess ( $Path , 'Decimate the contained files.' )) { Get-ChildItem -Path $Path -File | Where-Object { ( Get-Random -Min 1 -Max 11 ) % 10 -eq 0 } | Remove-Item -Confirm : $false } } } }

A few notes about the structure of this function:

I have elected to prevent further prompts from showing by telling the Remove-Item cmdlet to suppress all confirmation prompts. If I had not done this, the user would receieve a prompt for every file this function attempts to delete. This is often a desirable effect, so only remove further confirmation prompts on actions you are sure you've already comprehensively covered yourself.

The values from parameters like -Confirm and -WhatIf will be automatically applied to functions called by the command they're applied to, although as demonstrated the author of the command can opt to override them where appropriate. One of these code branches uses ShouldProcess , while the other uses ShouldContinue . Both of these are available when enabling SupportsShouldProcess for your function. ShouldProcess : Checks the function or cmdlet's declared ConfirmImpact against the current $ConfirmPreference and prompts if appropriate. Specifying -WhatIf turns this from a prompt into a dry-run where the action message is displayed, but the code path is automatically skipped.

: Checks the function or cmdlet's declared against the current and prompts if appropriate. Specifying turns this from a prompt into a dry-run where the action message is displayed, but the code path is automatically skipped. ShouldContinue : Unequivocally prompts for confirmation. These prompts cannot be suppressed, even with -Confirm:$false , so use them only where it is unquestionably necessary for the user to be prompted for the action. Be especially cautious, as using this can render this code path unusable in noninteractive (e.g., remoting) scenarios, as there is no way to suppress the prompt.

: Unequivocally prompts for confirmation. These prompts cannot be suppressed, even with , so use them only where it is necessary for the user to be prompted for the action.

ShouldProcess Overloads

ShouldProcess() and ShouldContinue() have several overloads available, each of which is detailed on their respective documentation pages.