Check if a Windows service exists and delete in PowerShell
I used the "-ErrorAction SilentlyContinue" solution but then later ran into the problem that it leaves an ErrorRecord behind. So here's another solution to just checking if the Service exists using "Get-Service".
# Determines if a Service exists with a name as defined in $ServiceName.
# Returns a boolean $True or $False.
Function ServiceExists([string] $ServiceName) {
[bool] $Return = $False
# If you use just "Get-Service $ServiceName", it will return an error if
# the service didn't exist. Trick Get-Service to return an array of
# Services, but only if the name exactly matches the $ServiceName.
# This way you can test if the array is emply.
if ( Get-Service "$ServiceName*" -Include $ServiceName ) {
$Return = $True
}
Return $Return
}
[bool] $thisServiceExists = ServiceExists "A Service Name"
$thisServiceExists
But ravikanth has the best solution since the Get-WmiObject will not throw an error if the Service didn't exist. So I settled on using:
Function ServiceExists([string] $ServiceName) {
[bool] $Return = $False
if ( Get-WmiObject -Class Win32_Service -Filter "Name='$ServiceName'" ) {
$Return = $True
}
Return $Return
}
So to offer a more complete solution:
# Deletes a Service with a name as defined in $ServiceName.
# Returns a boolean $True or $False. $True if the Service didn't exist or was
# successfully deleted after execution.
Function DeleteService([string] $ServiceName) {
[bool] $Return = $False
$Service = Get-WmiObject -Class Win32_Service -Filter "Name='$ServiceName'"
if ( $Service ) {
$Service.Delete()
if ( -Not ( ServiceExists $ServiceName ) ) {
$Return = $True
}
} else {
$Return = $True
}
Return $Return
}
There's no harm in using the right tool for the job, I find running (from Powershell)
sc.exe \\server delete "MyService"
the most reliable method that does not have many dependencies.
If you just want to check service existence:
if (Get-Service "My Service" -ErrorAction SilentlyContinue)
{
"service exists"
}
You can use WMI or other tools for this since there is no Remove-Service
cmdlet until Powershell 6.0 (See Remove-Service doc)
For example:
$service = Get-WmiObject -Class Win32_Service -Filter "Name='servicename'"
$service.delete()
Or with the sc.exe
tool:
sc.exe delete ServiceName
Finally, if you do have access to PowerShell 6.0:
Remove-Service -Name ServiceName