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Home/ Questions/Q 3359608
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 18, 20262026-05-18T02:53:34+00:00 2026-05-18T02:53:34+00:00

I’m considering using Powershell scripts for triggers on our Perforce server. Unfortunately, even on

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I’m considering using Powershell scripts for triggers on our Perforce server. Unfortunately, even on our fast hardware it still takes 2 seconds for Powershell to start up. Now, this doesn’t seem like much time unless you consider that 200 users are pounding the server constantly, and a trigger may (depending on conditions) cause a table lock while it runs, stalling out other related requests.

I’m looking for ways to reduce the startup time of Powershell. Things that I’ve found on Google:

  • Reduce the profile. This is a default installation, no profile customization, no PSCX, etc. so this doesn’t help.
  • Run NGEN on Posh binaries. This is old advice for a V1 issue. We’re on V2.
  • Keep it warm. Initial Posh startup is slow but later startups are fast. Also not helpful for us. On the server the warm start is 2 seconds and it’s kept warm by frequent requests.
  • Don’t use Powershell for this purpose. Well, I’m hoping to avoid that "solution"…

Does anyone have any other suggestions for cutting startup time? I’m not expecting a startup as fast as cmd.exe or a .NET command line app, but if I can get this to .5 seconds I think we’ll be ok. Impossible?

UPDATE – it turns out this is a 4.0 issue. If I add a config file as described in another SO question the startup takes 2 seconds. If I leave it at its default, then startup is under a quarter second.

Then I thought..perhaps it’s a 4.0 GAC issue. So I ran the script on the PowerShell Blog but it says all the assemblies are already ngen’d. I made sure that it is indeed using the 4.0 ngen as well.

So I’m left with two options:

  • Figure out why 4.0 is so much more expensive than 3.5.
  • Switch to the 3.5 framework where I do not need it and I do need the performance.

I’d love to solve the first but don’t know where to start. Can anyone help?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-18T02:53:35+00:00Added an answer on May 18, 2026 at 2:53 am

    I’m afraid you’re probably out of luck if you stick with the console host powershell.exe, unless you feel like writing an optimized script processor by hosting a runspace/runspacefactory in a custom console application – or a windows service – you roll yourself. You might shave a second off, but 0.5s startup for a .NET application is unlikely, especially if the servers are tight for memory.

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