Stop-InformationBarrierPoliciesApplication

This cmdlet is available only in Security & Compliance PowerShell. For more information, see Security & Compliance PowerShell.

Use the Stop-InformationBarrierPoliciesApplication cmdlet to stop the process of applying information barrier policies in the Microsoft Purview compliance portal.

For information about the parameter sets in the Syntax section below, see Exchange cmdlet syntax.

Syntax

Stop-InformationBarrierPoliciesApplication
    [-Identity] <PolicyIdParameter>
    [-Confirm]
    [-WhatIf]
    [<CommonParameters>]

Description

To use this cmdlet in Security & Compliance PowerShell, you need to be assigned permissions. For more information, see Permissions in the Microsoft Purview compliance portal.

Examples

Example 1

InformationBarrierPoliciesApplication -Identity 46237888-12ca-42e3-a541-3fcb7b5231d1

This example stops the application of information barrier policies per the policy application with the specified Identity value.

Parameters

-Confirm

The Confirm switch specifies whether to show or hide the confirmation prompt. How this switch affects the cmdlet depends on if the cmdlet requires confirmation before proceeding.

  • Destructive cmdlets (for example, Remove-* cmdlets) have a built-in pause that forces you to acknowledge the command before proceeding. For these cmdlets, you can skip the confirmation prompt by using this exact syntax: -Confirm:$false.
  • Most other cmdlets (for example, New-* and Set-* cmdlets) don't have a built-in pause. For these cmdlets, specifying the Confirm switch without a value introduces a pause that forces you acknowledge the command before proceeding.
Type:SwitchParameter
Aliases:cf
Position:Named
Default value:None
Required:False
Accept pipeline input:False
Accept wildcard characters:False
Applies to:Security & Compliance

-Identity

The Identity parameter specifies the active application of information barrier policies that you want to stop. This value is a GUID that's assigned when you run the Start-InformationBarrierPoliciesApplication cmdlet (for example, 46237888-12ca-42e3-a541-3fcb7b5231d1). You can also find the Identity value of the most recent policy application running the command Get-InformationBarrierPoliciesApplicationStatus.

Type:PolicyIdParameter
Position:0
Default value:None
Required:True
Accept pipeline input:True
Accept wildcard characters:False
Applies to:Security & Compliance

-WhatIf

The WhatIf switch doesn't work in Security & Compliance PowerShell.

Type:SwitchParameter
Aliases:wi
Position:Named
Default value:None
Required:False
Accept pipeline input:False
Accept wildcard characters:False
Applies to:Security & Compliance