News

PowerShell Crescendo Now Generally Available

Microsoft announced that PowerShell Crescendo has hit general availability status in version 1.0.

The offering is used to create native commands by rapidly developing PowerShell cmdlets for common command-line tools, regardless of platform, Microsoft says in a March 10 announcement. Specifically, Microsoft documentation says: "Crescendo amplifies the command-line experience of the original tool to include object output for the PowerShell pipeline, privilege elevation, and integrated help information. A Crescendo module replaces cumbersome command-line tools with PowerShell cmdlets that are easier to use in automation and packaged to share with team members."

It's available in the PowerShell Gallery:

Microsoft.PowerShell.Crescendo 1.0.0
[Click on image for larger view.] Microsoft.PowerShell.Crescendo 1.0.0 (source: Microsoft).

According to the project's GitHub repo, the GA release includes the following features and benefits:

  • Ability to define cmdlets from simple key/value statements in a JSON file
  • Support for modular design -- cmdlet definitions can be in a one or more JSON files
  • A JSON schema that helps you create your Crescendo configuration using IntelliSense and tooltips
  • Three styles of output handling code allowing you to separate your code from the cmdlet definitions for easier debugging and development
  • Privilege elevation mechanisms in Windows, Linux, and macOS
  • Crescendo generates a PowerShell script module ready for deployment
  • While Crescendo requires PowerShell 7 or higher for authoring configurations, the generated module can run on Windows PowerShell 5.1 and higher
  • Example configurations for you to copy and reuse
  • Experimental Help parsers that provide proof-of-concept examples for auto-generating cmdlet configurations

Published to the gallery on March 7, the tool has 3.003 total downloads at the time of this writing, with 50 downloads of the v1.0 release.

About the Author

David Ramel is an editor and writer at Converge 360.

comments powered by Disqus

Featured

  • Kubernetes for Developers

    Microsoft's Dan Wahlin previews his introductory "Kubernetes for Developers" session at Visual Studio Live! San Diego 2026, explaining how developers can get past the Kubernetes learning curve by starting locally, mastering Pods first, and using Services to make containerized applications reliably accessible.

  • VS Code Keeps Eye on Costs in v1.126 Update

    Visual Studio Code 1.126 adds session-level Copilot cost information, continuing Microsoft's recent focus on helping developers monitor and manage usage-based GitHub Copilot billing.

  • Open VSX 1.0.0 Puts Focus on Open Extension Registry for VS Code Ecosystem

    Eclipse Open VSX has reached 1.0.0, highlighting its role as a vendor-neutral registry for VS Code-compatible extensions.

  • Infragistics Puts MCP Toolchain at Center of Ultimate 26.1

    Infragistics Ultimate 26.1 introduces the Ignite UI Enterprise MCP toolchain for AI-assisted app development across Angular, React, Web Components and Blazor.

Subscribe on YouTube