Get-ChildItem
Gets the items and child items in one or more specified locations.
Syntax
Get-ChildItem
[[-Path] <string[]>]
[[-Filter] <string>]
[-Include <string[]>]
[-Exclude <string[]>]
[-Recurse]
[-Depth <uint32>]
[-Force]
[-Name]
[-UseTransaction]
[-Attributes <FlagsExpression[FileAttributes]>]
[-Directory]
[-File]
[-Hidden]
[-ReadOnly]
[-System]
[<CommonParameters>]
Get-ChildItem
[[-Filter] <string>]
-LiteralPath <string[]>
[-Include <string[]>]
[-Exclude <string[]>]
[-Recurse]
[-Depth <uint32>]
[-Force]
[-Name]
[-UseTransaction]
[-Attributes <FlagsExpression[FileAttributes]>]
[-Directory]
[-File]
[-Hidden]
[-ReadOnly]
[-System]
[<CommonParameters>]
Description
The Get-ChildItem cmdlet gets the items in one or more specified locations. If the item is a
container, it gets the items inside the container, known as child items. You can use the Recurse
parameter to get items in all child containers and use the Depth parameter to limit the number
of levels to recurse.
Get-ChildItem does not display empty directories. When a Get-ChildItem command includes the
Depth or Recurse parameters, empty directories are not included in the output.
Locations are exposed to Get-ChildItem by PowerShell providers. A location can be a file system
directory, registry hive, or a certificate store. For more information, see about_Providers.
Examples
Example 1: Get child items from a file system directory
This example gets the child items from a file system directory. The file names and subdirectory names are displayed. For empty locations the command does not return any output and returns to the PowerShell prompt.
The Get-ChildItem cmdlet uses the Path parameter to specify the directory C:\Test.
Get-ChildItem displays the files and directories in the PowerShell console.
Get-ChildItem -Path C:\Test
Directory: C:\Test
Mode LastWriteTime Length Name
---- ------------- ------ ----
d----- 2/15/2019 08:29 Logs
-a---- 2/13/2019 08:55 26 anotherfile.txt
-a---- 2/12/2019 15:40 118014 Command.txt
-a---- 2/1/2019 08:43 183 CreateTestFile.ps1
-ar--- 2/12/2019 14:31 27 ReadOnlyFile.txt
By default Get-ChildItem lists the mode (Attributes), LastWriteTime, file size (Length),
and the Name of the item. The letters in the Mode property can be interperted as follows:
l(link)d(directory)a(archive)r(read-only)h(hidden)s(system).
For more information about the mode flags, see about_Filesystem_Provider.
Example 2: Get child item names in a directory
This command lists only the names of items in a directory.
The Get-ChildItem cmdlet uses the Path parameter to specify the directory C:\Test. The
Name parameter returns only the file or directory names from the specified path.
Get-ChildItem -Path C:\Test -Name
Logs
anotherfile.txt
Command.txt
CreateTestFile.ps1
ReadOnlyFile.txt
Example 3: Get child items in the current directory and subdirectories
This example displays .txt files that are located in the current directory and its subdirectories.
Get-ChildItem -Path C:\Test\*.txt -Recurse -Force
Directory: C:\Test\Logs\Adirectory
Mode LastWriteTime Length Name
---- ------------- ------ ----
-a---- 2/12/2019 16:16 20 Afile4.txt
-a-h-- 2/12/2019 15:52 22 hiddenfile.txt
-a---- 2/13/2019 13:26 20 LogFile4.txt
Directory: C:\Test\Logs\Backup
Mode LastWriteTime Length Name
---- ------------- ------ ----
-a---- 2/12/2019 16:16 20 ATextFile.txt
-a---- 2/12/2019 15:50 20 LogFile3.txt
Directory: C:\Test\Logs
Mode LastWriteTime Length Name
---- ------------- ------ ----
-a---- 2/12/2019 16:16 20 Afile.txt
-a-h-- 2/12/2019 15:52 22 hiddenfile.txt
-a---- 2/13/2019 13:26 20 LogFile1.txt
Directory: C:\Test
Mode LastWriteTime Length Name
---- ------------- ------ ----
-a---- 2/13/2019 08:55 26 anotherfile.txt
-a---- 2/12/2019 15:40 118014 Command.txt
-a-h-- 2/12/2019 15:52 22 hiddenfile.txt
-ar--- 2/12/2019 14:31 27 ReadOnlyFile.txt
The Get-ChildItem cmdlet uses the Path parameter to specify C:\Test\*.txt. Path uses the
asterisk (*) wildcard to specify all files with the file name extension .txt. The Recurse
parameter searches the Path directory its subdirectories, as shown in the Directory:
headings. The Force parameter displays hidden files such as hiddenfile.txt that have a mode
of h.
Example 4: Get child items using the Include parameter
In this example Get-ChildItem uses the Include parameter to find specific items from the
directory specified by the Path parameter.
# When using the -Include parameter, if you do not include an asterisk in the path
# the command returns no output.
Get-ChildItem -Path C:\Test\ -Include *.txt
Get-ChildItem -Path C:\Test\* -Include *.txt
Directory: C:\Test
Mode LastWriteTime Length Name
---- ------------- ------ ----
-a---- 2/13/2019 08:55 26 anotherfile.txt
-a---- 2/12/2019 15:40 118014 Command.txt
-ar--- 2/12/2019 14:31 27 ReadOnlyFile.txt
The Get-ChildItem cmdlet uses the Path parameter to specify the directory C:\Test. The
Path parameter includes a trailing asterisk (*) wildcard to specify the directory's contents.
The Include parameter uses an asterisk (*) wildcard to specify all files with the file name
extension .txt.
When the Include parameter is used, the Path parameter needs a trailing asterisk (*)
wildcard to specify the directory's contents. For example, -Path C:\Test\*.
- If the Recurse parameter is added to the command, the trailing asterisk (
*) in the Path parameter is optional. The Recurse parameter gets items from the Path directory and its subdirectories. For example,-Path C:\Test\ -Recurse -Include *.txt - If a trailing asterisk (
*) is not included in the Path parameter, the command does not return any output and returns to the PowerShell prompt. For example,-Path C:\Test\.
Example 5: Get child items using the Exclude parameter
The example's output shows the contents of the directory C:\Test\Logs. The output is a reference for the other commands that use the Exclude and Recurse parameters.
Get-ChildItem -Path C:\Test\Logs
Directory: C:\Test\Logs
Mode LastWriteTime Length Name
---- ------------- ------ ----
d----- 2/15/2019 13:21 Adirectory
d----- 2/15/2019 08:28 AnEmptyDirectory
d----- 2/15/2019 13:21 Backup
-a---- 2/12/2019 16:16 20 Afile.txt
-a---- 2/13/2019 13:26 20 LogFile1.txt
-a---- 2/12/2019 16:24 23 systemlog1.log
Get-ChildItem -Path C:\Test\Logs\* -Exclude A*
Directory: C:\Test\Logs
Mode LastWriteTime Length Name
---- ------------- ------ ----
d----- 2/15/2019 13:21 Backup
-a---- 2/13/2019 13:26 20 LogFile1.txt
-a---- 2/12/2019 16:24 23 systemlog1.log
The Get-ChildItem cmdlet uses the Path parameter to specify the directory C:\Test\Logs.
The Exclude parameter uses the asterisk (*) wildcard to specify any files or directories that
begin with A or a are excluded from the output.
When the Exclude parameter is used, a trailing asterisk (*) in the Path parameter is
optional. For example, -Path C:\Test\Logs or -Path C:\Test\Logs\*.
- If a trailing asterisk (
*) is not included in the Path parameter, the contents of the Path parameter are displayed. The exceptions are file names or subdirectory names that match the Exclude parameter's value. - If a trailing asterisk (
*) is included in the Path parameter, the command recurses into the Path parameter's subdirectories. The exceptions are file names or subdirectory names that match the Exclude parameter's value. - If the Recurse parameter is added to the command, the recursion output is the same whether or
not the Path parameter includes a trailing asterisk (
*).
Example 6: Get the registry keys from a registry hive
This command gets all of the registry keys from the HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\HARDWARE registry key.
Get-ChildItem uses the Path parameter to specify the registry key HKLM:\HARDWARE. The
hive's path and top level of registry keys are displayed in the PowerShell console.
For more information, see about_Registry_Provider.
Get-ChildItem -Path HKLM:\HARDWARE
Hive: HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\HARDWARE
Name Property
---- --------
ACPI
DESCRIPTION
DEVICEMAP
RESOURCEMAP
UEFI
Get-ChildItem -Path HKLM:\HARDWARE -Exclude D*
Hive: HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\HARDWARE
Name Property
---- --------
ACPI
RESOURCEMAP
The first command shows the contents of the HKLM:\HARDWARE registry key. The Exclude parameter
tells Get-ChildItem not to return any subkeys that start with D*. Currently, the Exclude
parameter only works on subkeys, not item properties.
Example 7: Get all certificates with code-signing authority
This command gets each certificate in the PowerShell Cert: drive that has code-signing authority.
The Get-ChildItem cmdlet uses the Path parameter to specify the Cert: provider. The
Recurse parameter searches the directory specified by Path and its subdirectories. The
CodeSigningCert parameter gets only certificates that have code-signing authority.
Get-ChildItem -Path Cert:\* -Recurse -CodeSigningCert
For more information about the Certificate provider and the Cert: drive, see about_Certificate_Provider.
Example 8: Get items using the Depth parameter
This command displays the items in a directory and its subdirectories. The Depth parameter determines the number of subdirectory levels to include in the recursion. Empty directories are excluded from the output.
Get-ChildItem -Path C:\Parent -Depth 2
Directory: C:\Parent
Mode LastWriteTime Length Name
---- ------------- ------ ----
d----- 2/14/2019 10:24 SubDir_Level1
-a---- 2/13/2019 08:55 26 file.txt
Directory: C:\Parent\SubDir_Level1
Mode LastWriteTime Length Name
---- ------------- ------ ----
d----- 2/14/2019 10:24 SubDir_Level2
-a---- 2/13/2019 08:55 26 file.txt
Directory: C:\Parent\SubDir_Level1\SubDir_Level2
Mode LastWriteTime Length Name
---- ------------- ------ ----
d----- 2/14/2019 10:22 SubDir_Level3
-a---- 2/13/2019 08:55 26 file.txt
The Get-ChildItem cmdlet uses the Path parameter to specify C:\Parent. The Depth
parameter specifies two levels of recursion. Get-ChildItem displays the contents of the directory
specified by the Path parameter and the two levels of subdirectories.
Parameters
Gets files and folders with the specified attributes. This parameter supports all attributes and lets you specify complex combinations of attributes.
For example, to get non-system files (not directories) that are encrypted or compressed, type:
Get-ChildItem -Attributes !Directory+!System+Encrypted, !Directory+!System+Compressed
To find files and folders with commonly used attributes, use the Attributes parameter. Or, the parameters Directory, File, Hidden, ReadOnly, and System.
The Attributes parameter supports the following properties:
- Archive
- Compressed
- Device
- Directory
- Encrypted
- Hidden
- IntegrityStream
- Normal
- NoScrubData
- NotContentIndexed
- Offline
- ReadOnly
- ReparsePoint
- SparseFile
- System
- Temporary
For a description of these attributes, see the FileAttributes Enumeration.
To combine attributes, use the following operators:
!(NOT)+(AND),(OR)
Do not use spaces between an operator and its attribute. Spaces are accepted after commas.
For common attributes, use the following abbreviations:
D(Directory)H(Hidden)R(Read-only)S(System)
| Type: | FlagsExpression<T>[FileAttributes] |
| Accepted values: | Archive, Compressed, Device, Directory, Encrypted, Hidden, IntegrityStream, Normal, NoScrubData, NotContentIndexed, Offline, ReadOnly, ReparsePoint, SparseFile, System, Temporary |
| Position: | Named |
| Default value: | None |
| Accept pipeline input: | False |
| Accept wildcard characters: | False |
This parameter was added in PowerShell 5.0 and enables you to control the depth of recursion. By
default, Get-ChildItem displays the contents of the parent directory. The Depth parameter
determines the number of subdirectory levels that are included in the recursion and displays the
contents.
For example, Depth 2 includes the Path parameter's directory, first level of subdirectories,
and second level of subdirectories. By default directory names and file names are included in the
output.
Note
On a Windows computer from PowerShell or cmd.exe, you can display a graphical view of a directory structure with the tree.com command.
| Type: | UInt32 |
| Position: | Named |
| Default value: | None |
| Accept pipeline input: | False |
| Accept wildcard characters: | False |
To get a list of directories, use the Directory parameter or the Attributes parameter with the Directory property. You can use the Recurse parameter with Directory.
| Type: | SwitchParameter |
| Aliases: | ad, d |
| Position: | Named |
| Default value: | None |
| Accept pipeline input: | False |
| Accept wildcard characters: | False |
Specifies, as a string array, a property or property that this cmdlet excludes from the operation.
The value of this parameter qualifies the Path parameter. Enter a path element or pattern, such
as *.txt or A*. Wildcard characters are accepted.
A trailing asterisk (*) in the Path parameter is optional. For example, -Path C:\Test\Logs
or -Path C:\Test\Logs\*. If a trailing asterisk (*) is included, the command recurses into the
Path parameter's subdirectories. Without the asterisk (*), the contents of the Path
parameter are displayed. More details are included in Example 5 and the Notes section.
| Type: | String[] |
| Position: | Named |
| Default value: | None |
| Accept pipeline input: | False |
| Accept wildcard characters: | True |
To get a list of files, use the File parameter. You can use the Recurse parameter with File.
| Type: | SwitchParameter |
| Aliases: | af |
| Position: | Named |
| Default value: | None |
| Accept pipeline input: | False |
| Accept wildcard characters: | False |
Specifies a filter to qualify the Path parameter. The FileSystem
provider is the only installed PowerShell provider that supports the use of filters. Filters are
more efficient than other parameters, because the provider applies them when the cmdlet gets the
objects rather than having PowerShell filter the objects after they are retrieved. The filter string
is passed to the .NET API to enumerate files. That API only supports * and ? wildcards.
| Type: | String |
| Position: | 1 |
| Default value: | None |
| Accept pipeline input: | False |
| Accept wildcard characters: | True |
Allows the cmdlet to get items that cannot otherwise not be accessed by the user, such as hidden or system files. The Force parameter does not override security restrictions. Implementation varies among providers. For more information, see about_Providers.
| Type: | SwitchParameter |
| Position: | Named |
| Default value: | False |
| Accept pipeline input: | False |
| Accept wildcard characters: | False |
To get only hidden items, use the Hidden parameter or the Attributes parameter with the
Hidden property. By default, Get-ChildItem does not display hidden items. Use the Force
parameter to get hidden items.
| Type: | SwitchParameter |
| Aliases: | ah, h |
| Position: | Named |
| Default value: | None |
| Accept pipeline input: | False |
| Accept wildcard characters: | False |
Specifies, as a string array, an item or items that this cmdlet includes in the operation. The value
of this parameter qualifies the Path parameter. Enter a path element or pattern, such as
"*.txt". Wildcard characters are permitted. The Include parameter is effective only when the
command includes the contents of an item, such as C:\Windows\*, where the wildcard character
specifies the contents of the C:\Windows directory.
| Type: | String[] |
| Position: | Named |
| Default value: | None |
| Accept pipeline input: | False |
| Accept wildcard characters: | True |
Specifies a path to one or more locations. The value of LiteralPath is used exactly as it is typed. No characters are interpreted as wildcards. If the path includes escape characters, enclose it in single quotation marks. Single quotation marks tell PowerShell not to interpret any characters as escape sequences.
For more information, see about_Quoting_Rules.
| Type: | String[] |
| Aliases: | PSPath |
| Position: | Named |
| Default value: | None |
| Accept pipeline input: | True |
| Accept wildcard characters: | False |
Gets only the names of the items in the location. The output is a string object that can be sent down the pipeline to other commands. Wildcards are permitted.
| Type: | SwitchParameter |
| Position: | Named |
| Default value: | None |
| Accept pipeline input: | False |
| Accept wildcard characters: | True |
Specifies a path to one or more locations. Wildcards are accepted. The default location is the
current directory (.).
| Type: | String[] |
| Position: | 0 |
| Default value: | Current directory |
| Accept pipeline input: | True |
| Accept wildcard characters: | True |
To get only read-only items, use the ReadOnly parameter or the Attributes parameter ReadOnly property.
| Type: | SwitchParameter |
| Aliases: | ar |
| Position: | Named |
| Default value: | None |
| Accept pipeline input: | False |
| Accept wildcard characters: | False |
Gets the items in the specified locations and in all child items of the locations.
| Type: | SwitchParameter |
| Aliases: | s |
| Position: | Named |
| Default value: | False |
| Accept pipeline input: | False |
| Accept wildcard characters: | False |
Gets only system files and directories. To get only system files and folders, use the System parameter or Attributes parameter System property.
| Type: | SwitchParameter |
| Aliases: | as |
| Position: | Named |
| Default value: | None |
| Accept pipeline input: | False |
| Accept wildcard characters: | False |
Includes the command in the active transaction. This parameter is valid only when a transaction is in progress. For more information, see about_Transactions.
| Type: | SwitchParameter |
| Aliases: | usetx |
| Position: | Named |
| Default value: | False |
| Accept pipeline input: | False |
| Accept wildcard characters: | False |
Inputs
You can pipe a string that contains a path to Get-ChildItem.
Outputs
The type of object that Get-ChildItem returns is determined by the objects in the provider drive path.
If you use the Name parameter, Get-ChildItem returns the object names as strings.
Notes
- You can refer to
Get-ChildItemby its built-in aliases,ls,dir, andgci. For more information, see about_Aliases. Get-ChildItemdoes not get hidden items by default. To get hidden items, use the Force parameter.- The
Get-ChildItemcmdlet is designed to work with the data exposed by any provider. To list the providers available in your session, typeGet-PSProvider. For more information, see about_Providers.