Manage snapshot schedule policies using pxctl
Overview
This document explains how to manage your snapshot schedule policies using the pxctl
command-line tool. To see the list of the available subcommands and flags, run the pxctl sched-policy
command with the --help
flag as in the following example:
pxctl sched-policy --help
Manage schedule policies
Usage:
pxctl sched-policy [flags]
pxctl sched-policy [command]
Aliases:
sched-policy, sp
Examples:
pxctl sched-policy create --periodic 15 myPolicyName
Available Commands:
create Create a schedule policy
delete Delete a schedule policy
list List all schedule policies
update Update a schedule policy
Flags:
-h, --help help for sched-policy
Global Flags:
--ca string path to root certificate for ssl usage
--cert string path to client certificate for ssl usage
--color output with color coding
--config string config file (default is $HOME/.pxctl.yaml)
--context string context name that overrides the current auth context
-j, --json output in json
--key string path to client key for ssl usage
--output-type string use "wide" to show more details
--raw raw CLI output for instrumentation
--ssl ssl enabled for portworx
Use "pxctl sched-policy [command] --help" for more information about a command.
Create a schedule policy
To create a snapshotting policy, use the pxctl sched-policy create
command. Run it with the --help
flag to list the available options:
pxctl sched-policy create --help
Create a schedule policy
Usage:
pxctl sched-policy create [flags]
Aliases:
create, c
Examples:
pxctl sched-policy create [flags] policy-name
Flags:
-d, --daily strings daily snapshot at specified hh:mm,k (keeps 7 by default)
-h, --help help for create
-m, --monthly strings monthly snapshot at specified day@hh:mm,k (keeps 12 by default)
-p, --periodic string periodic snapshot interval in mins,k (keeps 5 by default), 0 disables all schedule snapshots
-w, --weekly strings weekly snapshot at specified weekday@hh:mm,k (keeps 5 by default)
Global Flags:
--ca string path to root certificate for ssl usage
--cert string path to client certificate for ssl usage
--color output with color coding
--config string config file (default is $HOME/.pxctl.yaml)
--context string context name that overrides the current auth context
-j, --json output in json
--key string path to client key for ssl usage
--output-type string use "wide" to show more details
--raw raw CLI output for instrumentation
--ssl ssl enabled for portworx
List schedule policies
Run the following command to list your schedule policies:
pxctl sched-policy list
Policy Description
p1 periodic 1h0m0s,keep last 5, weekly Sunday@12:00,keep last 4
Update schedule policies
To update a schedule policy, use the pxctl sched-policy update
command. Run it with the --help
flag and you will see the list of the available options:
pxctl sched-policy update --help
Update a schedule policy
Usage:
pxctl sched-policy update [flags]
Aliases:
update, u
Examples:
pxctl sched-policy update [flags] policy-name
Flags:
-d, --daily strings daily snapshot at specified hh:mm,k (keeps 7 by default)
-h, --help help for update
-m, --monthly strings monthly snapshot at specified day@hh:mm,k (keeps 12 by default)
-p, --periodic string periodic snapshot interval in mins,k (keeps 5 by default), 0 disables all schedule snapshots
-w, --weekly strings weekly snapshot at specified weekday@hh:mm,k (keeps 5 by default)
Global Flags:
--ca string path to root certificate for ssl usage
--cert string path to client certificate for ssl usage
--color output with color coding
--config string config file (default is $HOME/.pxctl.yaml)
--context string context name that overrides the current auth context
-j, --json output in json
--key string path to client key for ssl usage
--output-type string use "wide" to show more details
--raw raw CLI output for instrumentation
--ssl ssl enabled for portworx
Continuing our previous example with the p1
schedule policy, let's make it so that our policy creates periodic backups every 120 minutes instead of 60:
pxctl sched-policy update --periodic 120,5 --weekly sunday@12:00,4 p1
Now, let's make sure our new settings are applied:
pxctl sched-policy list
Policy Description
p1 periodic 2h0m0s,keep last 5, weekly Sunday@12:00,keep last 4
Delete a schedule policy
To delete a schedule policy, run the pxctl sched-policy delete
command with the name of the policy you want to delete as a parameter:
pxctl sched-policy delete p1