Public/Stop-ArmorCompleteVM.ps1
function Stop-ArmorCompleteVM { <# .SYNOPSIS This cmdlet powers off Armor Complete virtual machines. .DESCRIPTION The specified virtual machine in the Armor Complete account in context will be powered off. Types: - Shutdown initiates a graceful shutdown of the operating system. VMware Tools or open-vm-tools must be installed and running for this request to succeed. This the recommend way to stop your VMs. - Off initiates a hard shutdown of the VM- effectively disconnecting the virtual power cord from the VM. This shutdown method has the potential to cause data corruption and should only be used when necessary. - ForceOff should not be used. It breaks the state of the environment by marking the VM as powered off in the Armor Management Portal (AMP) and vCloud Director, but leaves the VM running in vSphere. .INPUTS UInt16 PSCustomObject .NOTES Troy Lindsay Twitter: @troylindsay42 GitHub: tlindsay42 .EXAMPLE {required: show one or more examples using the function} .LINK http://armorpowershell.readthedocs.io/en/latest/cmd_stop.html#stop-armorcompletevm .LINK https://github.com/tlindsay42/ArmorPowerShell/blob/master/Armor/Public/Stop-ArmorCompleteVM.ps1 .LINK https://docs.armor.com/display/KBSS/Perform+VM+Power+Actions .LINK https://developer.armor.com/#!/Infrastructure/Vm_PowerActionVm #> [CmdletBinding( SupportsShouldProcess = $true, ConfirmImpact = 'High' )] [OutputType( [ArmorVM[]] )] [OutputType( [ArmorVM] )] param ( <# Specifies the ID of the Armor Complete virtual machine that you want to stop. #> [Parameter( Mandatory = $true, HelpMessage = 'Please enter the ID of the Armor Complete virtual machine that you want to stop', Position = 0, ValueFromPipeline = $true, ValueFromPipelineByPropertyName = $true )] [ValidateRange( 1, 65535 )] [UInt16] $ID, <# Specifies how you want to stop the Armor Complete virtual machine. Types: - Shutdown initiates a graceful shutdown of the operating system. VMware Tools or open-vm-tools must be installed and running for this request to succeed. This the recommend way to stop your VMs. - Off initiates a hard shutdown of the VM- effectively disconnecting the virtual power cord from the VM. This shutdown method has the potential to cause data corruption and should only be used when necessary. - ForceOff should not be used. It breaks the state of the environment by marking the VM as powered off in the Armor Management Portal (AMP) and vCloud Director, but leaves the VM running in vSphere. #> [Parameter( Position = 1 )] [ValidateSet( 'Shutdown', 'Off', 'ForceOff' )] [String] $Type = 'Shutdown', <# Specifies the API version for this request. #> [Parameter( Position = 2 )] [ValidateSet( 'v1.0' )] [String] $ApiVersion = $Global:ArmorSession.ApiVersion ) begin { $function = $MyInvocation.MyCommand.Name Write-Verbose -Message "Beginning: '${function}'." Test-ArmorSession } # End of begin process { [ArmorVM[]] $return = $null $resources = Get-ArmorApiData -FunctionName $function -ApiVersion $ApiVersion if ( $PSCmdlet.ShouldProcess( $ID, $resources.Description ) ) { $uri = New-ArmorApiUri -Endpoints $resources.Endpoints.Where( { $_ -match "/${Type}$" } ) -IDs $ID $results = Submit-ArmorApiRequest -Uri $uri -Method $resources.Method -Description $resources.Description $return = $results } $return } # End of process end { Write-Verbose -Message "Ending: '${function}'." } # End of end } # End of function |