本帖最后由 DAIC 于 2014-4-11 15:06 编辑
Test-Path can test whether or not a given file or folder exists. This works fine for paths that use a drive letter, but can fail with pure UNC paths.
At its simplest, this should return $true, and it does (provided you did not disable your administrative shares):
$path = '\\127.0.0.1\c$$'
Test-Path -Path $path
Now, the very same code can also return $false:- Set-Location -Path HKCU:\
- $path = '\\127.0.0.1\c$'
-
- Test-Path -Path $path
复制代码 If a path does not use a drive letter, PowerShell falls back to the current path, and if that path happens to point to a non-file system location, Test-Path interprets the UNC path in the context of that provider. Since there is no such path in your Registry, Test-Path returns $false.
To make Test-Path work reliably with UNC paths, make sure you prepend the UNC path with the FileSystem provider. Now, the result is valid regardless of current drive location:- Set-Location -Path HKCU:\
- $path = 'filesystem::\\127.0.0.1\c$'
-
- Test-Path -Path $path
复制代码 http://powershell.com/cs/blogs/tips/archive/2014/04/02/testing-unc-paths.aspx |