blob: a156017628db87e1cd5643257e5d781a7ee75547 [file] [log] [blame]
#!/usr/bin/env pwsh
# See ./x for why these scripts exist.
$ErrorActionPreference = "Stop"
# syntax check
Get-Command -syntax ${PSCommandPath}
$xpy = Join-Path $PSScriptRoot x.py
# Start-Process for some reason splits arguments on spaces. (Isn't powershell supposed to be simpler than bash?)
# Double-quote all the arguments so it doesn't do that.
$xpy_args = @("""$xpy""")
foreach ($arg in $args) {
$xpy_args += """$arg"""
}
function Get-Application($app) {
return Get-Command $app -ErrorAction SilentlyContinue -CommandType Application
}
function Invoke-Application($application, $arguments) {
$process = Start-Process -NoNewWindow -PassThru $application $arguments
# WORKAROUND: Caching the handle is necessary to make ExitCode work.
# See https://stackoverflow.com/a/23797762
$handle = $process.Handle
$process.WaitForExit()
if ($null -eq $process.ExitCode) {
Write-Error "Unable to read the exit code"
Exit 1
}
Exit $process.ExitCode
}
foreach ($python in "py", "python3", "python", "python2") {
# NOTE: this only tests that the command exists in PATH, not that it's actually
# executable. The latter is not possible in a portable way, see
# https://github.com/PowerShell/PowerShell/issues/12625.
if (Get-Application $python) {
if ($python -eq "py") {
# Use python3, not python2
$xpy_args = @("-3") + $xpy_args
}
Invoke-Application $python $xpy_args
}
}
$found = (Get-Application "python*" | Where-Object {$_.name -match '^python[2-3]\.[0-9]+(\.exe)?$'})
if (($null -ne $found) -and ($found.Length -ge 1)) {
$python = $found[0]
Invoke-Application $python $xpy_args
}
Write-Error "${PSCommandPath}: error: did not find python installed"
Exit 1