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Rapid Recovery 6.9 - 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

Start-VMExport

The Start-VMExport command initiates the launch of a virtual export from the selected recovery point to a VMware Workstaation server virtual machine.

Required parameters include the name of the protected machine containing recovery points to export; the name of the virtual machine you are exporting to; the amount of RAM to be allocated on the virtual machine; and the path to the local or network, folder where the resulting virtual machine files will be stored.

Usage

The usage for the command is as follows:

Start-VMExport -core -user [user name] -password [password] -protectedserver [machine name] or [IP address]] -volumes [volume names] -rpn [number | numbers] | 
-time [time string] -vmname [virtual machine name] [-ram [total megabytes] | 
-usesourceram] -linuxhostnme [linux hostname] -hostport [linux port] -targetpath [location] pathusername [user name] - pathpassword [password]

Command Options

The following table describes the options available for the Start-VMExport command:

Table 187: Start-VMExport 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 also have to provide a password. If none are provided, then the logged-on user's credentials will be 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 are provided, then the logged-on user's credentials will be used.
-protectedserver
Protected machine with recovery points to be exported.
-volumes
Optional. List of volume names to be exported. If not specified, all volumes in the specified recovery points will be exported. Values must be enclosed in double quotes, each separated by a space. do not use trailing slashes in volume names. For example, specify “C:” not “C:/”
-rpn
Optional. The sequential number of a recovery point to be exported. (You can use the Get-RecoveryPoints command to obtain recovery point numbers.
Note: If neither ‘time’ nor ‘rpn’ option is specified in this command, than the most recent recovery point will be exported.
-time
Optional. Determines recovery point to be selected for export. You need to specify exact time in the format “MM/DD/YYYY hh:mm tt” (for example: “04/24/2015 09:00 AM”).” Specify date time values of the time zone set on your local machine.
Note: If neither ‘time’ nor ‘rpn’ option is specified in this command, than the most recent recovery point will be exported.
-vmname
Windows name of the virtual machine.
-ram
Allocate specific amount of RAM on the virtual server.
-usesourceram
Optional. Allocate the same amount of RAM on the virtual server as the source protected machine.
-targetpath
Local or network or Linux path to the folder where the virtual machine files are to be stored.
-pathusername
User name for network machine. Only required when you specify network path in parameter -targetpath.
-pathpassword
Password for network machine. Only required when you specify network path in parameter -targetpath.
-version
Version of VMware Tools to use. Valid versions are: 7, 8, 9, and 10.

Example:

Export all volumes from the latest recovery point on machine 10.10.12.97 to a VM called NewVMwareVM:

>Start-VBExport -protectedserver 10.10.12.97 -vmname NewVMWareVM -ram usesourceram -targetpath D:/exports

Stop-ActiveJobs

The Stop-ActiveJobs cancels active jobs for a specified protected machine.

Usage

The usage for the command is as follows:

Stop-ActiveJobs [-protectedserver [machine name | IP address] | -core [host name]] -user [user name] -password [password] -jobtype [jobtype]

Command Options

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

Table 188: Stop-ActiveJobs command options
Option Description
-?
Display this help message.
-all
Select and cancel events of the specified type for all protected machines.
-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 also have to provide a password. If none are provided, then the logged-on user's credentials will be 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 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.
-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
Determines protected machine on which jobs should be canceled.
-jobtype
Optional. Specifies job type filter. Available values are: ‘transfer’ (data transfer), ‘repository’ (repository maintenance), ‘replication’ (local and remote replications), ‘backup’ 9backup and restore), ‘bootcdbuilder’ (create boot CDs), ‘diagnostics’(upload logs), ‘exchange’ (Exchange Server files check), ‘export (recovery point export), ‘pushinstall’ (deploy Agent software to protected machines), ‘rollback’ (restore data from recovery point), ‘rollup’ (recovery point rollup’s), ‘sqlattach’ (agent attachability checks), ‘mount’ (not repository). By default, all jobs of the specified type are canceled.

Example:

Stop transfer job in protected machine:

>Stop-ActiveJobs –protectedserver 10.10.1.76 -jobtype transfer

Stop all jobs for a specific protected machine:

>Stop-ActiveJobs –protectedserver 10.10.1.76 -all 

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 189: 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 190: 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
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