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Start-VBRHvReplicaFailback

In this article

    Short Description

    Performs failback to the production host.

    Applies to

    Platform: Hyper-V

    Product Edition: Standard, Enterprise, Enterprise Plus

    Syntax

    Start-VBRHvReplicaFailback -RestorePoint <COib> [-Reason <String>] [-RunAsync] [-WarningAction <ActionPreference>] [-WarningVariable <String>] [-WhatIf] [-Confirm] [<CommonParameters>]

    Related Commands

    Get-VBRRestorePoint

    Detailed Description

    This cmdlet stars failing back to the production host after failover to its replica.

    This cmdlet lets you finalize the replica failover started with Start-VBRHvReplicaFailover by switching back to the production VM with data synchronization.

    When you perform failback, you switch back to the original VM on the production site. The failback process collects all the changes that were made to the replica while you failed over to it, and implies them to the source VM. This allows you to switch between source and replica VMs without data loss.

    To switch back to the production VM and discard the changes made to the replica while failover, start an undo failover process. In this case you return to the production VM in the state preceeding failover. Run Stop-VBRReplicaFailover to undo failover.

    Undo Failback: If you tried to fail back to the original VM but was unable to, because i.e. it was non-functional or corrupted, you can undo the failback and return to the working replica. Run Stop-VBRViReplicaFailback to undo failback.

    Parameters

    Parameter

    Description

    Required

    Position

    Accept
    Pipeline
    Input

    Accept
    Wildcard
    Characters

    RestorePoint

    Specifies the replica restore point which you want to fail back.

    True

    Named

    True (ByValue,
    ByProperty
    Name)

    False

    Reason

    Specifies the reason for performing a failback.

    False

    Named

    False

    False

    RunAsync

    Indicates that the command returns immediately without waiting for the task to complete.

    False

    Named

    False

    False

    WhatIf

    Specifies whether the cmdlet writes a message that describes the effects of running the cmdlet without actually performing any action.

    False

    Named

    False

    False

    Confirm

    Specifies whether the cmdlet displays a prompt that asks if the user is sure that they want to continue.

    False

    Named

    False

    False

    <CommonParameters>

    This cmdlet supports Microsoft PowerShell common parameters. For more information about common parameters, see http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/p/?LinkID=113216.

    Example 1

    This command fails back from the VM replica named "WebServer_ replica". The restore point is obtained with Get-VBRRestorePoint and piped down. The restore points of the VM are filtered with Sort-Object method by the "creationtime" property to get the most recent one. The reason is "Configuration recovery". The RunAsync parameter is set to bring the process to the background.

    PS C:\PS> Get-VBRRestorePoint -Name "WebServer_replica" | Sort-Object $_.creationtime -Descending | Select -First 1 | Start-VBRHvReplicaFailback -Reason "Configuration recovery" -RunAsync

    Example 2

    This command fails back from the VM replica represented by the $"WebServer_replica restorepoint" variable. The restore point is obtained with Get-VBRRestorePoint and assigned to the variable beforehand. The reason is "Data recovery". The RunAsync parameter is set to bring the process to the background.

    PS C:\PS> Start-VBRHvReplicaFailback -RestorePoint $"WebServer_replica restorepoint" -Reason "Data recovery" -RunAsync