[This is preliminary documentation and is subject to change. Blank topics are included as placeholders.]

Modifies the settings for a trusted application.

Syntax

Set-CsTrustedApplication [-Identity <ExternalApplicationIdentity>] [-Confirm [<SwitchParameter>]] [-Force <SwitchParameter>] [-Port <Int32>] [-WhatIf [<SwitchParameter>]]

Parameters

Parameter Required Type Description

Identity

Optional

ExternalApplicationIdentity

The unique identifier of the trusted application you want to modify. Identity values must be entered in the format <pool FQDN>/<application ID>, where pool FQDN is the fully qualified domain name (FQDN) of the pool on which the application resides, and application ID is the name of the application.

Port

Optional

Int32

The port number on which the application will run.

Confirm

Optional

SwitchParameter

Prompts you for confirmation before executing the command.

WhatIf

Optional

SwitchParameter

Describes what would happen if you executed the command without actually executing the command.

Detailed Description

A trusted application is an application developed by another party that is given trusted status to run as part of Microsoft Communications Server 2010 but that is not a built-in part of the product. This cmdlet allows you to modify the port number that the external service that runs the application is using.

When you use this cmdlet to modify a trusted application, you must supply a value for the Identity parameter. The Identity is the fully qualified domain name (FQDN) of the pool on which the application is homed followed by a slash (/) followed by the application ID. For example, TrustPool.litwareinc.com/tapp2, where TrustPool.litwareinc.com is the pool FQDN and tapp2 is the application ID. Note that if you view an existing application by calling Get-CsTrustedApplication, you’ll see an ID that looks more like this: TrustPool.litwareinc.com/urn:application:tapp2. Notice the prefix urn:application: before the application name (tapp2). While this prefix is part of the Identity, it’s not required when you specify the value for the Identity parameter.

Return Types

This cmdlet does not return a value. It modifies an object of type Microsoft.Rtc.Management.Xds.DisplayTrustedApplication.

Examples

-------------------------- Example 1 ------------------------

Copy Code
Set-CsTrustedApplication -Identity TrustPool.litwareinc.com/tapp2 -Port 6200

This example modifies the port for the trusted application with the Identity TrustPool.litwareinc.com/tapp2 to port 6200. This is accomplished by passing the Set-CsTrustedApplication cmdlet an Identity of TrustPool.litwareinc.com/tapp2. This Identity is comprised of the name of the pool on which the application resides followed by the name (or ID) of the application. We then include the Port parameter, giving it a value of 6200 to modify that value.