Executing powercfg -l
on my machine returns the following:
Existing Power Schemes (* Active)
-----------------------------------
Power Scheme GUID: 381b4222-f694-41f0-9685-ff5bb260df2e (Balanced)
Power Scheme GUID: 8c5e7fda-e8bf-4a96-9a85-a6e23a8c635c (High performance) *
Power Scheme GUID: a1841308-3541-4fab-bc81-f71556f20b4a (Power saver)
Then when you duplicate the current active scheme with powercfg -duplicatescheme 8c5e7fda-e8bf-4a96-9a85-a6e23a8c635c
the output is as follows:
Power Scheme GUID: d0b7e1f3-c9ed-49d1-93d4-6ed688244dea (High performance)
Seems to me that capturing tokens=4
from the powercfg -duplicatescheme
command would get you your backup scheme's GUID.
@echo off
setlocal
rem get current scheme
for /f "tokens=4" %%I in ('powercfg -getactivescheme') do set current=%%I
rem create backup
for /f "tokens=4" %%I in ('powercfg -duplicatescheme %current%') do set backup=%%I
rem switch to backup
powercfg -setactive %backup%
echo Switched from %current% to %backup%