/// <summary> /// The Capture Role operation creates a copy of the operating system /// virtual hard disk (VHD) that is deployed in the virtual machine, /// saves the VHD copy in the same storage location as the operating /// system VHD, and registers the copy as an image in your image /// gallery. From the captured image, you can create additional /// customized virtual machines. For more information about images and /// disks, see Manage Disks and Images. For more information about /// capturing images, see How to Capture an Image of a Virtual Machine /// Running Windows Server 2008 R2 or How to Capture an Image of a /// Virtual Machine Running Linux. (see /// http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/windowsazure/jj157201.aspx /// for more information) /// </summary> /// <param name='operations'> /// Reference to the /// Microsoft.WindowsAzure.Management.Compute.IVirtualMachineOperations. /// </param> /// <param name='serviceName'> /// The name of your service. /// </param> /// <param name='deploymentName'> /// The name of your deployment. /// </param> /// <param name='virtualMachineName'> /// The name of the virtual machine to restart. /// </param> /// <param name='parameters'> /// Parameters supplied to the Capture Virtual Machine operation. /// </param> /// <returns> /// A standard service response including an HTTP status code and /// request ID. /// </returns> public static OperationResponse BeginCapturing(this IVirtualMachineOperations operations, string serviceName, string deploymentName, string virtualMachineName, VirtualMachineCaptureParameters parameters) { try { return operations.BeginCapturingAsync(serviceName, deploymentName, virtualMachineName, parameters).Result; } catch (AggregateException ex) { if (ex.InnerExceptions.Count > 1) { throw; } else { throw ex.InnerException; } } }
/// <summary> /// The Capture Role operation creates a copy of the operating system /// virtual hard disk (VHD) that is deployed in the virtual machine, /// saves the VHD copy in the same storage location as the operating /// system VHD, and registers the copy as an image in your image /// gallery. From the captured image, you can create additional /// customized virtual machines. For more information about images and /// disks, see Manage Disks and Images. For more information about /// capturing images, see How to Capture an Image of a Virtual Machine /// Running Windows Server 2008 R2 or How to Capture an Image of a /// Virtual Machine Running Linux. (see /// http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/windowsazure/jj157201.aspx /// for more information) /// </summary> /// <param name='operations'> /// Reference to the /// Microsoft.WindowsAzure.Management.Compute.IVirtualMachineOperations. /// </param> /// <param name='serviceName'> /// The name of your service. /// </param> /// <param name='deploymentName'> /// The name of your deployment. /// </param> /// <param name='virtualMachineName'> /// The name of the virtual machine to restart. /// </param> /// <param name='parameters'> /// Parameters supplied to the Capture Virtual Machine operation. /// </param> /// <returns> /// The response body contains the status of the specified asynchronous /// operation, indicating whether it has succeeded, is inprogress, or /// has failed. Note that this status is distinct from the HTTP status /// code returned for the Get Operation Status operation itself. If /// the asynchronous operation succeeded, the response body includes /// the HTTP status code for the successful request. If the /// asynchronous operation failed, the response body includes the HTTP /// status code for the failed request, and also includes error /// information regarding the failure. /// </returns> public static Task<ComputeOperationStatusResponse> CaptureAsync(this IVirtualMachineOperations operations, string serviceName, string deploymentName, string virtualMachineName, VirtualMachineCaptureParameters parameters) { return operations.CaptureAsync(serviceName, deploymentName, virtualMachineName, parameters, CancellationToken.None); }