You can use the Artemis CLI to execute activation sequence maintenance/recovery tools for Replication with Pluggable Lock Manager.
The 2 main commands are activation list and activation set, that can be used together to recover some disaster happened to local/coordinated activation sequences.
Here is a disaster scenario built around the RI (using Apache ZooKeeper and Apache curator) to demonstrate the usage of such commands.
1. ZooKeeper cluster disaster
A proper ZooKeeper cluster should use at least 3 nodes, but what happens if all these nodes crash loosing any activation state information required to manage replication?
During the disaster (i.e. ZooKeeper nodes are no longer reachable) the follow occurs:
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Active brokers shutdown (and if restarted, should hang waiting to reconnect to the ZooKeeper cluster again) 
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Passive brokers unpair and wait to reconnect to the ZooKeeper cluster again 
Necessary administrative action:
- 
Stop all brokers 
- 
Restart ZooKeeper cluster 
- 
Search for brokers with the highest local activation sequence for their NodeIDby running this command from thebinfolder of the broker:$ ./artemis activation list --local Local activation sequence for NodeID=7debb3d1-0d4b-11ec-9704-ae9213b68ac4: 1
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From the binfolder of the brokers with the highest local activation sequence# assuming 1 to be the highest local activation sequence obtained at the previous step # for NodeID 7debb3d1-0d4b-11ec-9704-ae9213b68ac4 $ ./artemis activation set --remote --to 1 Forced coordinated activation sequence for NodeID=7debb3d1-0d4b-11ec-9704-ae9213b68ac4 from 0 to 1
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Restart all brokers: previously active ones should be able to be active again 
The more ZooKeeper nodes there are the less chance that a disaster like this requires administrative intervention because it allows the ZooKeeper cluster to tolerate more failures.