Exporting data from a protected machine to a virtual machine creates a virtual standby machine. If you have continuous virtual export set up, you can use this command to force Rapid Recovery to export data on demand, regardless of the predetermined schedule.
The usage for the command is as follows:
/forcevirtualstandby -core [host name] -user [user name] -password [password login] -protectedserver [name] | -all
The following table describes the options available for the ForceVirtualStandby
command:
Option | Description |
---|---|
-? |
Display this help message. |
-core |
Optional. Remote Core host machine IP address (with an optional port number). By default, the connection is made to the Core installed on the local machine. |
-user |
Optional. User name for the remote Core host machine. If you specify a user name, you must also provide a password. If none is provided, then the credentials for the logged-on user are used. |
-password |
Optional. Password to the remote Core host machine. If you specify a password, you also have to provide a user name. If none is provided, then the credentials for the logged-on user are used. |
-protectedserver |
The name or space-separated names of virtualized machines. |
-all |
This command specifies whether to force all scheduled virtual exports. |
Force all virtual standby exports:
>cmdutil /forcevirtualstandby -all
Force virtual standby for two machines:
>cmdutil /forcevirtualstandby -protectedserver 10.10.35.48 10.10.35.69
The getoracleinstancemetadata
command lets you retrieve the detailed metadata for a specified Oracle instance.
The usage for the command is as follows:
/getoracleinstancemetadata -core [host name] -user [user name] -password [password] -protectedserver [name | IP address] -instancename [Oracle instance SID]
The following table describes the options available for the getoracleinstancemetadata
command:
Option | Description |
---|---|
-? |
Display this help message. |
-core |
Optional. Remote Core host machine IP address (with an optional port number). By default, the connection is made to the Core installed on the local machine. |
-user |
Optional. The user name for the remote Core host machine. If you specify a user name, you must also provide a password. If none is provided, then the credentials for the logged-on user are used. |
-password |
Optional. The password to the remote Core host machine. If you specify a password, you also have to provide a user name. If none is provided, then the credentials for the logged-on user are used. |
-protectedserver |
The name or IP address of the protected machine. |
-instancename |
The Oracle SID from which you want to fetch metadata. |
Get detailed metadata for the named Oracle instance. If no metadata credentials are set, then only summary metadata displays:
>cmdutil /getoracleinstancemetadata -core 10.10.127.42 -user admin -password -676df#df -protectedserver 10.10.34.88 -instancename ORCL
The help
command displays a list of the available commands and their definitions. It also provides copyright and version details.
The usage for the command is as follows:
/help
Request Command Line help:
>cmdutil /help
The list
command returns information about all recovery points, active jobs, completed jobs, failed jobs, invalid (failed) recovery points, valid (passed) recovery points, mounts, protected servers, volumes, virtualized servers, unprotected volumes, clusters, protection groups, SQL databases, Exchange databases, replicated servers, and repositories for the specified agent or list of servers currently protected by the Core. The most recent records return by default. You can list all records or specify how many records display by using a number parameter. This parameter should contain the letter "l" for the latest recovery points and "f" for the first recovery point. Each recovery point has its own number, which the administrator can use for mounting.
The usage for the command is as follows:
/list [rps | passed | failed | mounts | volumes | protectedservers | activejobs | completed jobs | failedjobs | virtualizedservers | unprotectedvolumes | clusters | protectiongroups | sqldatabases | exchangemailstores | replicatedservers | repositories] -protectedserver [name | IP address] -core [host name] -user [user name] -password [password] –number [all | l<number> | f<number> | <number>] -jobtype
The following table describes the options available for the list
command:
Option | Description |
---|---|
-? |
Display this help message. |
-list |
Select one of the following options:
|
-core |
Optional. Remote Core host machine IP address (with an optional port number). By default, the connection is made to the Core installed on the local machine. |
-user |
Optional. User name for the remote Core host machine. If you specify a user name, you must also provide a password. If none is provided, then the credentials for the logged-on user are used. |
-password |
Optional. Password to the remote Core host machine. If you specify a password, you also have to provide a user name. If none is provided, then the credentials for the logged-on user are used. |
-all |
For show jobs only. Display al events of a specific type (active/failed/completed) on the core server. |
-protectedserver |
Protected machine with recovery points to display. |
-number |
Optional. Number of data items to display. Use only with the following specifiers: 'rps', 'activejobs', 'completedjobs', 'failedjobs'. Available values are:
|
-jobtype |
Optional. Filter output by job type. Available values include:
|
List the 30 most recent recovery points:
>cmdutil /list rps -core 10.10.10.10 -user administrator -password 23WE@#$sdd -protectedserver 10.10.5.22 -number l30
View all failed data transfer jobs performed by a protected machine:
>cmdutil /list failed jobs -core 10.10.10.10 -user administrator -password 23WE@#$sdd -protectedserver 10.10.5.22 -number all -jobtype transfer
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