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Rapid Recovery 6.7 - Commands and Scripting Reference Guide

Introduction to Rapid Recovery Command Line Management utility PowerShell module
Prerequisites for using PowerShell Working with commands and cmdlets Rapid Recovery PowerShell module cmdlets
Add-EsxAutoProtectObjects Add-EsxVirtualMachines Add-HyperVClusterSharedVirtualDisks Add-HyperVClusterVirtualMachines Add-HyperVVirtualMachines Disable-HyperVAutoProtection Edit-AzureVirtualStandby Edit-EsxiVirtualStandby Edit-HyperVVirtualStandby Edit-OracleDBVerifyNightlyJob Edit-OracleLogTruncationNightlyJob Edit-Replication Edit-ScheduledArchive Edit-VBVirtualStandby Edit-VMVirtualStandby Enable-HyperVAutoProtection Enable-OracleArchiveLogMode Get-ActiveJobs Get-CloudAccounts Get-Clusters Get-CompletedJobs Get-ExchangeMailStores Get-Failed Get-FailedJobs Get-HyperVClusterSharedVirtualDisks Get-ListAzureVMSizes Get-Mounts Get-OracleInstances Get-Passed Get-ProtectedServers Get-ProtectionGroups Get-QueuedJobs Get-RecoveryPoints Get-ReplicatedServers Get-Repositories Get-ScheduledArchives Get-SqlDatabases Get-TransferQueueEntries Get-UnprotectedVolumes Get-Version Get-VirtualizedServers Get-Volumes New-AzureVirtualStandby New-Base New-BootCD New-CloudAccount New-EncryptionKey New-EsxiVirtualStandby New-FileSearch New-HyperVVirtualStandby New-Mount New-Replication New-Repository New-ScheduledArchive New-Snapshot New-VBVirtualStandby New-VMVirtualStandby Push-Replication Push-Rollup Remove-Agent Remove-EsxAutoProtectObjects Remove-HyperVClusterSharedVirtualDisks Remove-HyperVClusterVirtualMachines Remove-HyperVVirtualMachines Remove-Mount Remove-Mounts Remove-RecoveryPoints Remove-RemoteMount Remove-RemoteMounts Remove-Replication Remove-Repository Remove-ScheduledArchive Remove-VirtualStandby Restart-CoreService Resume-Replication Resume-ScheduledArchive Resume-Snapshot Resume-VirtualStandby Set-AgentMetadataCredentials Set-DedupCacheConfiguration Set-License Set-OracleMetadataCredentials Set-ReplicationResponse Start-Archive Start-AttachabilityCheck Start-AzureDeploy Start-AzureExport Start-ChecksumCheck Start-ConsumeSeedDrive Start-CopySeedDrive Start-EsxiExport Start-HypervExport Start-LogTruncation Start-MountabilityCheck Start-OptimizationJob Start-OracleDBVerifyJob Start-OracleLogTruncationJob Start-Protect Start-ProtectCluster Start-ProtectEsxServer Start-ProtectHyperVCluster Start-ProtectHyperVServer Start-RepositoryCheck Start-RestoreAgent Start-RestoreArchive Start-ScheduledArchive Start-VBExport Start-VirtualStandby Start-VMExport Stop-ActiveJobs Stop-CoreService Suspend-Replication Suspend-ScheduledArchive Suspend-Scheduler Suspend-Snapshot Suspend-VirtualStandby Suspend-VMExport Update-Repository
Localization Qualifiers
Scripting

Stop-CoreService

Use this command to stop the Core service on a Core machine.

Usage

The usage for the command is as follows:

Stop-CoreService -core [host name] -user [user name] -password [password] -cancelactivejobs [true | false] -wait [time in seconds]

Command Options

The following table describes the options available for the Stop-CoreService command:

Table 187: Stop-CoreService command options
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.
-cancelactivejobs
Optional. Use this option to cancel all active jobs on the Core. The default setting is "false."
-wait
Optional. This option indicates that the command should wait until the Core service is fully stopped for the specified period of time in seconds before canceling active jobs.

Example:

Stop the Core service:

>Stop-CoreService -core 10.10.127.42 -user admin -password 676df#df -cancelactivejobs true -wait 600

Suspend-Replication

The Suspend-Replication command lets an administrator pause replication.

A user can pause replication in three ways:

  • Pause replication on the source Core for all protected machines (-outgoing parameter)

    The administrator must specify the remote machine name with outgoing replication pairing to pause outgoing replication on the source Core.

    		>Suspend-replication -outgoing 10.10.12.10
  • Pause replication on the source Core for a single protected machine (-protectedserver parameter)
    		>Suspend-replication -protectedserver 10.10.12.97
  • Pause replication on the target Core (-incoming parameter)

    If the local Core is a target Core, the administrator can pause replication by specifying the source Core using the –incoming parameter.

Command Options

The following table describes the options available for the Suspend-Replication command:

Table 188: Suspend-Replication command options
Option Description
-?
Display this help message.
-all
Pauses all protected machines on the selected Core.
-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.
-pause
[snapshots], [replication] or [vmexport].
-password
Optional. Password to the remote Core host machine. If you specify a password, you also have to provide a user name. If none are provided, then the logged-on user's credentials will be used.
-protectedserver
Pause the current protected server.
-user
Optional. User name for the remote Core host machine. If you specify a user name, you also have to provide a password. If none are provided, then the logged-on user's credentials will be used.
-incoming
Host name of the remote Core that replicates to the Core machine. Replication is suspended for all protected machines on the remote Core.
-outgoing
Host name of the remote target core to which data is replicating. Replication is suspended for all protected machines on the remote core.

Example:

Pause outgoing replication on the remote Core with the IP address: 10.10.1.15, for the single protected machine with the IP address: 10.10.1.76:

>Suspend-replication –core 10.10.1.15 –protectedserver 10.10.1.76

Pause outgoing replication from the local Core to remote target with the IP address: 10.10.1.63 for all protected machines:

>Suspend-replication –outgoing 10.10.1.63

Pause incoming replication from 10.10.1.82 on the remote Core with the IP address: 10.10.1.15 (Administrator is able to pause incoming replication only for whole machine):

>Suspend-replication –core 10.10.1.15 –incoming 10.10.1.82

Suspend-ScheduledArchive

The Suspend-ScheduledArchive PowerShell command lets you pause a Rapid Recovery scheduled archive. This command prevents the archive from occurring as scheduled until you reactivate it.

If the topic is relevant, include and re-link:

For more information, see Resume-ScheduledArchive.

.

Usage

The usage for the command is as follows:

Suspend-ScheduledArchive -core [host name] -user [login] -password [password] -all -ids [id | id1 id2]

Command Options

The following table describes the options available for the Suspend-ScheduledArchive command:

Table 189: Suspend-ScheduledArchive command options
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.
-password
Optional. Password to the remote Core host machine. If you specify a password, you also have to provide a user name. If none are provided, then the logged-on user's credentials will be used.
-user
Optional. User name for the remote Core host machine. If you specify a user name, you also have to provide a password. If none are provided, then the logged-on user's credentials will be used.
-all
Pauses all scheduled archives.
-id
The identification number or space-separated numbers of scheduled archives to suspend.

Example:

Suspend multiple scheduled archives:

>Suspend-ScheduledArchive -ids 799138c8-3dfc-4398-9711-1823733c2a31, 26c29bb7-b320-47f5-b5a8-dffc49f50e25

Suspend-Scheduler

This command lets you suspend or pause the task scheduler it has been paused.

Usage

The usage for the command is as follows:

Suspend-Scheduler -core [host name] -user [user name] -password [password] -cancelactivejobs [true | false]

Command Options

The following table describes the options available for the Suspend-Scheduler command:

Table 190: Suspend-Scheduler command options
Option Description
-?
Display this help message.
-restore
[snapshots], [replication] or [vmexport].
-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.
-cancelactivejobs
Optional. Use this option to cancel all active jobs on the Core. The default setting is "false."

Example:

Pause the task scheduler:

>Suspend-Scheduler -core 10.10.127.42 -user admin -password 676df#df -cancelactivejobs true
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