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118 changes: 118 additions & 0 deletions Draft-Accepted/RFC0066-PowerShell-User-Content-Location.md
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---
RFC: RFC0066
Author: Justin Chung
Status: Draft
SupercededBy: N/A
Version: 1.0
Area: Core
Comments Due: 07/31/2025
Plan to implement: Yes
---

# PowerShell User Content Location

This RFC proposes moving the current PowerShell user content location out of OneDrive to the
`AppData` directory on Windows machines.

## Motivation

```
As a user,
I can customize the location where PowerShell user content is installed,
so that I can avoid problems created by file sync solutions like OneDrive.
```

- PowerShell currently places profile, modules, and configuration files in the user's Documents
folder, which is against established conventions for shell configurations and tools.
- PowerShell content files in OneDrive can lead to unwanted syncing of module files, leading to
various issues.
- There is strong community demand for changing this behavior as the current setup is problematic
for many users.
- Changing the default location would align PowerShell with other developer tools and improve
usability.

## Specification

- This will be an experimental feature.
- The content folder location change will only apply to PowerShell on Windows.
- Configurability of the content folder will apply to all platforms.
- A configuration file in the PowerShell user content folder will determine the location of the user
scoped **PSModulePath**.
- By default, the PowerShell user content folder will be located in the
`$env:LOCALAPPDATA\Microsoft\PowerShell`.
- The new location becomes the location used as the `CurrentUser` scope for PSResourceGet.
- The proposed directory structure:

```
C:\Users\UserName\AppData\Local\PowerShell\
├── powershell.config.json (Not Configurable)
└── <PSContent> (Configurable)
├── Scripts (Not Configurable)
├── Modules (Not Configurable)
├── Help (Not Configurable)
└── <*profile>.ps1 (Not Configurable)
```

- The following setting is added to the `powershell.config.json` file:

**UserPSContentPath** specifies the full path of the content folder. The default value is
`$env:LOCALAPPDATA\PowerShell\PSContent`. The user can change this value to a different path.

```json
{
"UserPSContentPath" : "$env:LOCALAPPDATA\\PowerShell\\PSContent",
}
```

## User Experience

- On startup PowerShell will create a directory in AppData and a configuration file.
- The user scoped **PSModulePath** will point to `Modules` folder under the location specified by
**UserPSContentPath**.
- Users can configure a custom location for PowerShell user content by changing the value of
**UserPSContentPath**.
- Users will need to manually move/copy their existing PowerShell user content from the Documents
folder to the new location after enabling the feature.

## Other considerations

- The following functionalities will be affected:
- SecretManagement
- SecretManagement extension vaults are registered for the current user context in:
`$env:LOCALAPPDATA\Microsoft\PowerShell\secretmanagement\secretvaultregistry\`

When an extension vault is registered, SecretManagement stores the full path to the extension
module in the registry. Moving the PowerShell content to a new location will break the vault
registrations.
- Document instructions on how to re-register vaults after moving the content folder.
- Document the need to keep Modules in the Documents folder to so that SecretManagement
continues to work for multiple installs of PowerShell 7 (stable and preview).

- Use the following script to copy the PowerShell contents folder:

```pwsh
$newPath = "C:\Custom\PowerShell\Modules"
$currentUserModulePath = [System.Environment]::GetFolderPath('MyDocuments') + "\PowerShell"
Copy-Item -Path $currentUserModulePath -Destination $newPath -Recurse -Force
```

- PowerShellGet is hardcoded to install scripts and modules in the user's `Documents` folder. It
will not support this feature.

## Implementation questions

- Will the experimental feature be enabled by default?
- Recommendation: No, the user should explicitly enable the feature and copy their existing
PowerShell user content to the new location.

- How does `$PROFILE` get populated?
- Can profile scripts be moved to `PSContent`?
- The feature needs to update `$PROFILE` to point to profile scripts in the new location.

- What happens if **UserPSContentPath** is added to the machine-level configuration file in
`$PSHOME/powershell.config.json`?
- Recommendation: Ignore the setting in the machine-level configuration file since this is a user
setting. No error - just ignore it.

- Will **UserPSContentPath** support environment variables (like `$env:USERNAME` or `%USERNAME%`)?
- This could enable a global configuration scenario if we allowed configuration in `$PSHOME`.