Book Image

Windows Server 2012 Automation with PowerShell Cookbook

By : EDRICK GOAD
Book Image

Windows Server 2012 Automation with PowerShell Cookbook

By: EDRICK GOAD

Overview of this book

Automating server tasks allows administrators to repeatedly perform the same, or similar, tasks over and over again. With PowerShell scripts, you can automate server tasks and reduce manual input, allowing you to focus on more important tasks. Windows Server 2012 Automation with PowerShell Cookbook will show several ways for a Windows administrator to automate and streamline his/her job. Learn how to automate server tasks to ease your day-to-day operations, generate performance and configuration reports, and troubleshoot and resolve critical problems. Windows Server 2012 Automation with PowerShell Cookbook will introduce you to the advantages of using Windows Server 2012 and PowerShell. Each recipe is a building block that can easily be combined to provide larger and more useful scripts to automate your systems. The recipes are packed with examples and real world experience to make the job of managing and administrating Windows servers easier. The book begins with automation of common Windows Networking components such as AD, DHCP, DNS, and PKI, managing Hyper-V, and backing up the server environment. By the end of the book you will be able to use PowerShell scripts to automate tasks such as performance monitoring, reporting, analyzing the environment to match best practices, and troubleshooting.
Table of Contents (19 chapters)
Windows Server 2012 Automation with PowerShell Cookbook
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Restoring Windows system state


The Windows system state contains the components necessary to recover the individual system without data or applications. Server access, file shares, Active Directory, Certificate Services, Clustering, Registry, DHCP, and IIS are a few components that are included in the system state backup. When recovering an entire server for DR or testing, the system state is a key component to the recovery process.

Getting ready

For this recipe, we will be using a server configured for backups, similar to the Configuring backup policies recipe, and that has successfully completed at least one system state backup.

How to do it...

  1. Identify the backup set.

    Get-WBBackupSet
    $myBackup = Get-WBBackupSet | `
    Where-Object VersionId -eq 03/03/2013-19:31
  2. Initiate the system state restore.

    Start-WBSystemStateRecovery -BackupSet $myBackup 

    When executed, the system state will restore as follows:

  3. Select Y to reboot the system.

How it works...

We start by identifying the backup set that we want...