functions/Get-DbaRepServer.ps1
#ValidationTags#Messaging,FlowControl,Pipeline,CodeStyle# function Get-DbaRepServer { <# .SYNOPSIS Gets a replication server object .DESCRIPTION Gets a replication server object .PARAMETER SqlInstance The target SQL Server instance or instances .PARAMETER SqlCredential Login to the target instance using alternative credentials. Windows and SQL Authentication supported. Accepts credential objects (Get-Credential) .PARAMETER EnableException By default, when something goes wrong we try to catch it, interpret it and give you a friendly warning message. This avoids overwhelming you with "sea of red" exceptions, but is inconvenient because it basically disables advanced scripting. Using this switch turns this "nice by default" feature off and enables you to catch exceptions with your own try/catch. .NOTES Tags: Replication Author: Chrissy LeMaire (@cl), netnerds.net Website: https://dbatools.io Copyright: (c) 2018 by dbatools, licensed under MIT License: MIT https://opensource.org/licenses/MIT .EXAMPLE PS C:\> Get-DbaRepServer -SqlInstance sql2016 Gets the replication server object for sql2016 using Windows authentication .EXAMPLE PS C:\> Get-DbaRepServer -SqlInstance sql2016 -SqlCredential repadmin Gets the replication server object for sql2016 using SQL authentication #> [CmdletBinding()] param ( [Parameter(Mandatory, ValueFromPipeline)] [Alias("ServerInstance", "SqlServer")] [DbaInstanceParameter[]]$SqlInstance, [PSCredential]$SqlCredential, [switch]$EnableException ) process { foreach ($instance in $SqlInstance) { try { $server = Connect-SqlInstance -SqlInstance $instance -SqlCredential $sqlcredential New-Object Microsoft.SqlServer.Replication.ReplicationServer $server.ConnectionContext.SqlConnectionObject } catch { Stop-Function -Message "Failure" -Category ConnectionError -ErrorRecord $_ -Target $instance -Continue } } } } |