Song recommendation of the day
Screaming Females put on some of the best live shows I've been to.
The problem
I wrote a PowerShell script to generate markdown tables for the default permissions of Octopus Deploy's built-in user roles.
I ran into a snag matching the permissions granted to a role to their descriptions.
The object holding the descriptions looks like this:
$permissionDetails = @{
EnvironmentEdit = @{
Description = "Edit environment information"
}
EnvironmentView = @{
Description = "View environment information"
}
TeamView = @{
Description = "View team information"
}
UserView = @{
Description = "View user information"
}
}
The role has an array of permissions granted to it.
$grantedPermissions = @("TeamView", "UserView")
I need to iterate over this array and access the Description
property of the permission property that matches the name.
The solution
How to do this was a gap in my PowerShell knowledge. My first few attempts did not work at all.
After a few searches, I found this solution. You can reference a property name using a string.
$obj."SomeProp"
If you can reference it using a string, maybe you can reference it using a variable?
foreach ($name in $grantedPermissions) {
Write-Output $permissionDetails.$name.Description
}
That works!
I will definitely be using this trick in the future.
This post was originally published at blog.rousseau.dev. Cover photo by Sam Dan Truong on Unsplash.