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webhook-server/scripts/examples/zerto-post-failover.ps1
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justin 85a700841b
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Sync from GitHub main: v0.1.1, v0.1.2, wiki sync
Squashes the work that landed on GitHub via PRs #2 (v0.1.1), #3
(v0.1.2), and #4 (wiki sync) into a single commit on Gitea so both
remotes converge. Content is identical to github/main; commit history
is split for branching reasons (Gitea was merged via PR #1 long ago,
GitHub used squash merges from then on, so the SHAs diverged).

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-05-08 11:13:31 -04:00

79 lines
3.2 KiB
PowerShell

<#
.SYNOPSIS
Zerto post-failover script. Fires the on-prem Webhook Server which does
the real work (DNS updates, service health checks, notifications).
.DESCRIPTION
Designed to be dropped into a Zerto VPG's post-recovery script slot. The
Zerto Virtual Manager's PowerShell runner has a limited module set and
runs scripts synchronously, so this script:
- uses curl.exe (ships with Windows 10 1803+ / Server 2019+) instead
of any module-dependent HTTP client;
- calls an ASYNC webhook endpoint - the server returns 202 in
milliseconds and runs the actual work in the background;
- returns within seconds regardless of how long the post-failover
actions take, so Zerto's failover sequence is never blocked.
Wire this into your VPG via the Zerto UI:
VPG settings -> Recovery -> Scripts -> Post-Recovery Script
Path: C:\path\to\zerto-post-failover.ps1
Parameters: leave empty (we read from $env:ZertoVPGName)
.NOTES
Configure $WebhookUrl and either:
- paste the bearer token directly into $Bearer (simplest, but the
token then lives in this file), or
- point $BearerFile at a file readable only by the ZVM service
account (better - same threat model as Zerto's own credential
storage).
#>
$ErrorActionPreference = 'Stop'
# ----------------------------- CONFIGURE ---------------------------------
$WebhookUrl = 'http://webhook.contoso.local:8080/hook/post-failover'
$Bearer = '' # paste here, or use $BearerFile
$BearerFile = 'C:\ProgramData\Zerto\webhook-token.txt' # one line: the token
# -------------------------------------------------------------------------
if (-not $Bearer -and (Test-Path $BearerFile)) {
$Bearer = (Get-Content -LiteralPath $BearerFile -TotalCount 1).Trim()
}
if (-not $Bearer) {
throw "No bearer token. Set `$Bearer in this script or write the token to $BearerFile."
}
# Compose the payload. Zerto exposes a few env vars; fall back gracefully.
$payload = @{
operation = 'failover'
vpg = if ($env:ZertoVPGName) { $env:ZertoVPGName } else { 'unknown' }
timestamp = (Get-Date).ToUniversalTime().ToString('o')
} | ConvertTo-Json -Compress
# curl on Windows handles long / quoted JSON better via @file than via -d "...".
$tempBody = Join-Path $env:TEMP ("zerto-webhook-{0}.json" -f ([guid]::NewGuid()))
$payload | Out-File -FilePath $tempBody -Encoding utf8 -NoNewline
try {
Write-Host "POST $WebhookUrl (vpg=$($env:ZertoVPGName))"
& curl.exe `
--silent --show-error --fail-with-body `
--max-time 10 `
-X POST `
-H "Authorization: Bearer $Bearer" `
-H "Content-Type: application/json" `
-d "@$tempBody" `
"$WebhookUrl"
if ($LASTEXITCODE -ne 0) {
# curl prints its own error to stderr; surface a non-zero exit so Zerto's
# script log records the failure but we don't block the failover.
Write-Warning "Webhook call failed with curl exit $LASTEXITCODE; continuing."
} else {
Write-Host "Webhook accepted (run id is in the response above)."
}
}
finally {
Remove-Item $tempBody -ErrorAction SilentlyContinue
}