unpause

Description

This operation unpauses a paused file system snapshot policy and updates the lifecycle state of the file system snapshot policy from INACTIVE to ACTIVE. By default, file system snapshot policies are in the ACTIVE state. When a file system snapshot policy is not paused, or in the ACTIVE state, file systems that are associated with the policy will have snapshots created and deleted according to the schedules defined in the policy.

If the policy is already in the ACTIVE state, you cannot unpause it. You can’t unpause a policy that is in a DELETING, DELETED, FAILED, CREATING, or ACTIVE state; attempts to unpause a policy in these states result in a 409 conflict error.

Usage

oci fs filesystem-snapshot-policy unpause [OPTIONS]

Required Parameters

--filesystem-snapshot-policy-id [text]

The OCID of the file system snapshot policy.

Optional Parameters

--from-json [text]

Provide input to this command as a JSON document from a file using the file://path-to/file syntax.

The --generate-full-command-json-input option can be used to generate a sample json file to be used with this command option. The key names are pre-populated and match the command option names (converted to camelCase format, e.g. compartment-id –> compartmentId), while the values of the keys need to be populated by the user before using the sample file as an input to this command. For any command option that accepts multiple values, the value of the key can be a JSON array.

Options can still be provided on the command line. If an option exists in both the JSON document and the command line then the command line specified value will be used.

For examples on usage of this option, please see our “using CLI with advanced JSON options” link: https://docs.cloud.oracle.com/iaas/Content/API/SDKDocs/cliusing.htm#AdvancedJSONOptions

--if-match [text]

For optimistic concurrency control. In the PUT or DELETE call for a resource, set the if-match parameter to the value of the etag from a previous GET or POST response for that resource. The resource will be updated or deleted only if the etag you provide matches the resource’s current etag value.

--max-wait-seconds [integer]

The maximum time to wait for the resource to reach the lifecycle state defined by --wait-for-state. Defaults to 1200 seconds.

--wait-for-state [text]

This operation creates, modifies or deletes a resource that has a defined lifecycle state. Specify this option to perform the action and then wait until the resource reaches a given lifecycle state. Multiple states can be specified, returning on the first state. For example, --wait-for-state SUCCEEDED --wait-for-state FAILED would return on whichever lifecycle state is reached first. If timeout is reached, a return code of 2 is returned. For any other error, a return code of 1 is returned.

Accepted values are:

ACTIVE, CREATING, DELETED, DELETING, FAILED, INACTIVE
--wait-interval-seconds [integer]

Check every --wait-interval-seconds to see whether the resource has reached the lifecycle state defined by --wait-for-state. Defaults to 30 seconds.