BatchClient.EnableJobAsync Method

Definition

[Protocol Method] Enables the specified Job, allowing new Tasks to run.

  • This protocol method allows explicit creation of the request and processing of the response for advanced scenarios.
public virtual System.Threading.Tasks.Task<Azure.Response> EnableJobAsync (string jobId, int? timeOutInSeconds = default, DateTimeOffset? ocpdate = default, Azure.RequestConditions requestConditions = default, Azure.RequestContext context = default);
abstract member EnableJobAsync : string * Nullable<int> * Nullable<DateTimeOffset> * Azure.RequestConditions * Azure.RequestContext -> System.Threading.Tasks.Task<Azure.Response>
override this.EnableJobAsync : string * Nullable<int> * Nullable<DateTimeOffset> * Azure.RequestConditions * Azure.RequestContext -> System.Threading.Tasks.Task<Azure.Response>
Public Overridable Function EnableJobAsync (jobId As String, Optional timeOutInSeconds As Nullable(Of Integer) = Nothing, Optional ocpdate As Nullable(Of DateTimeOffset) = Nothing, Optional requestConditions As RequestConditions = Nothing, Optional context As RequestContext = Nothing) As Task(Of Response)

Parameters

jobId
String

The ID of the Job to enable.

timeOutInSeconds
Nullable<Int32>

The maximum time that the server can spend processing the request, in seconds. The default is 30 seconds. If the value is larger than 30, the default will be used instead.".

ocpdate
Nullable<DateTimeOffset>

The time the request was issued. Client libraries typically set this to the current system clock time; set it explicitly if you are calling the REST API directly.

requestConditions
RequestConditions

The content to send as the request conditions of the request.

context
RequestContext

The request context, which can override default behaviors of the client pipeline on a per-call basis.

Returns

The response returned from the service.

Exceptions

jobId is null.

jobId is an empty string, and was expected to be non-empty.

Service returned a non-success status code.

Examples

This sample shows how to call EnableJobAsync.

Uri endpoint = new Uri("<https://my-service.azure.com>");
TokenCredential credential = new DefaultAzureCredential();
BatchClient client = new BatchClient(endpoint, credential);

Response response = await client.EnableJobAsync("<jobId>");

Console.WriteLine(response.Status);

This sample shows how to call EnableJobAsync with all parameters.

Uri endpoint = new Uri("<https://my-service.azure.com>");
TokenCredential credential = new DefaultAzureCredential();
BatchClient client = new BatchClient(endpoint, credential);

Response response = await client.EnableJobAsync("<jobId>", timeOutInSeconds: 1234, ocpdate: DateTimeOffset.Parse("Tue, 10 May 2022 18:57:31 GMT"), requestConditions: null);

Console.WriteLine(response.Status);

Applies to