aws docdb restore-db-cluster-to-point-in-time

Restores a cluster to an arbitrary point in time. Users can restore to any point in time before LatestRestorableTime for up to BackupRetentionPeriod days. The target cluster is created from the source cluster with the same configuration as the original cluster, except that the new cluster is created with the default security group

Options

NameDescription
--db-cluster-identifier <string>The name of the new cluster to be created. Constraints: Must contain from 1 to 63 letters, numbers, or hyphens. The first character must be a letter. Cannot end with a hyphen or contain two consecutive hyphens
--source-db-cluster-identifier <string>The identifier of the source cluster from which to restore. Constraints: Must match the identifier of an existing DBCluster
--restore-to-time <timestamp>The date and time to restore the cluster to. Valid values: A time in Universal Coordinated Time (UTC) format. Constraints: Must be before the latest restorable time for the instance. Must be specified if the UseLatestRestorableTime parameter is not provided. Cannot be specified if the UseLatestRestorableTime parameter is true. Cannot be specified if the RestoreType parameter is copy-on-write. Example: 2015-03-07T23:45:00Z
--use-latest-restorable-timeA value that is set to true to restore the cluster to the latest restorable backup time, and false otherwise. Default: false Constraints: Cannot be specified if the RestoreToTime parameter is provided
--no-use-latest-restorable-timeA value that is set to true to restore the cluster to the latest restorable backup time, and false otherwise. Default: false Constraints: Cannot be specified if the RestoreToTime parameter is provided
--port <integer>The port number on which the new cluster accepts connections. Constraints: Must be a value from 1150 to 65535. Default: The default port for the engine
--db-subnet-group-name <string>The subnet group name to use for the new cluster. Constraints: If provided, must match the name of an existing DBSubnetGroup. Example: mySubnetgroup
--vpc-security-group-ids <list>A list of VPC security groups that the new cluster belongs to
--tags <list>The tags to be assigned to the restored cluster
--kms-key-id <string>The AWS KMS key identifier to use when restoring an encrypted cluster from an encrypted cluster. The AWS KMS key identifier is the Amazon Resource Name (ARN) for the AWS KMS encryption key. If you are restoring a cluster with the same AWS account that owns the AWS KMS encryption key used to encrypt the new cluster, then you can use the AWS KMS key alias instead of the ARN for the AWS KMS encryption key. You can restore to a new cluster and encrypt the new cluster with an AWS KMS key that is different from the AWS KMS key used to encrypt the source cluster. The new DB cluster is encrypted with the AWS KMS key identified by the KmsKeyId parameter. If you do not specify a value for the KmsKeyId parameter, then the following occurs: If the cluster is encrypted, then the restored cluster is encrypted using the AWS KMS key that was used to encrypt the source cluster. If the cluster is not encrypted, then the restored cluster is not encrypted. If DBClusterIdentifier refers to a cluster that is not encrypted, then the restore request is rejected
--enable-cloudwatch-logs-exports <list>A list of log types that must be enabled for exporting to Amazon CloudWatch Logs
--deletion-protectionSpecifies whether this cluster can be deleted. If DeletionProtection is enabled, the cluster cannot be deleted unless it is modified and DeletionProtection is disabled. DeletionProtection protects clusters from being accidentally deleted
--no-deletion-protectionSpecifies whether this cluster can be deleted. If DeletionProtection is enabled, the cluster cannot be deleted unless it is modified and DeletionProtection is disabled. DeletionProtection protects clusters from being accidentally deleted
--cli-input-json <string>Performs service operation based on the JSON string provided. The JSON string follows the format provided by ``--generate-cli-skeleton``. If other arguments are provided on the command line, the CLI values will override the JSON-provided values. It is not possible to pass arbitrary binary values using a JSON-provided value as the string will be taken literally
--generate-cli-skeleton <string>Prints a JSON skeleton to standard output without sending an API request. If provided with no value or the value ``input``, prints a sample input JSON that can be used as an argument for ``--cli-input-json``. If provided with the value ``output``, it validates the command inputs and returns a sample output JSON for that command