I'm having a problem happening only in windows... (Bless windows...)
If I run this script at powershell:
schtasks.exe /create /tn "Test_22" /tr "powershell.exe C:\site.org\tasks\Test_22\Test_22.ps1" /sc once /st 17:22 /sd (get-date (get-date -Date "2013-09-10") -Format dd/MM/yyyy) /ru System /rl HIGHEST
Works exactly as I want! But that is only in the computers with locale at Spanish. The ones with locale as English failed, cause 10/09/2013 means October 9th 2013. And that is ok... the problem is, If I make this:
((Get-Culture).DateTimeFormat).ShortDatePattern
It does not returns MM/dd/yyyy as it should, but M/d/yyyy which is not correct, cause for some amazing reason, for schtasks.exe is not the same 9/10/2013 and 09/10/2013.
Is there any way I can fix this without having to make:
switch (((Get-Culture).DateTimeFormat).ShortDatePattern) {
case M/d/yyyy : format = StupidWindows
}
Or something like that?
Worth mentioning I'm not an expert at powershell, so maybe the stupid one is me and not windows (although after a while investigating this, I'm very sure the stupid one is windows and not me...)
How about this (broken into multiple lines using the backtick escape character for readability):
If you are using Powershell 3, look into the PSScheduledJobs module as well.