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Posted: Wed Nov 26, 2008 3:25 pm Post subject: computers get disconnected from domain at same time everyday |
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I'm just facing the same problem. People get disconnected from domain at the same time than you.
I'm also getting crazy.
Did you finally found a solution?
Can you please share it?
Thanks in advance.
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Meinolf Weber Guest
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Posted: Thu Nov 27, 2008 6:44 am Post subject: Re: computers get disconnected from domain at same timeevery |
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Hello Joan,
To what posting are you answering? Please describe your own setup of the
domain, amount of DC's, sites, childdomains and what exactly happens. Also
the OS with the SP and if it is updated.
Best regards
Meinolf Weber
Disclaimer: This posting is provided "AS IS" with no warranties, and confers
no rights.
** Please do NOT email, only reply to Newsgroups
** HELP us help YOU!!! http://www.blakjak.demon.co.uk/mul_crss.htm
| Quote: | I'm just facing the same problem. People get disconnected from domain
at the same time than you.
I'm also getting crazy.
Did you finally found a solution?
Can you please share it?
Thanks in advance. |
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integralli Guest
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Posted: Wed Dec 03, 2008 7:37 am Post subject: Re: netlogon events 5805, 5722 logged on dc |
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integralli;4036804 Wrote:
| Quote: | What if I have deleted the computer account from AD, deleted the DNS
record and I don't know where the machine is ? If this event keeps
coming up, how do I delete it forever, meaning the event id does not
appear anymore ?
|
Then you will find these machines IP addresses on the security events
as Failure Audit Event ID 539 after which it will be easy to find them.
--
integralli
------------------------------------------------------------------------
integralli's Profile: http://forums.techarena.in/members/integralli.htm
View this thread: http://forums.techarena.in/windows-server-help/778904.htm
http://forums.techarena.in
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Guest Guest
Posts Location
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Posted: Wed Dec 03, 2008 7:37 am Post subject: Google Ads |
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Guest
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Posted: Wed Dec 10, 2008 3:49 am Post subject: Server manager 8.3 |
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Hi,
Do you still have the server manager software available. My copy got lost when my server crashed and I didn't have a backup. Intel no longer has it out on the support page Would it be possible for you to get me a copy?
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Meinolf Weber [MVP-DS] Guest
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Posted: Wed Dec 10, 2008 7:31 am Post subject: Re: Server manager 8.3 |
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Hello Richard,
To whom are you talking?
Best regards
Meinolf Weber
Disclaimer: This posting is provided "AS IS" with no warranties, and confers
no rights.
** Please do NOT email, only reply to Newsgroups
** HELP us help YOU!!! http://www.blakjak.demon.co.uk/mul_crss.htm
| Quote: | Hi,
Do you still have the server manager software available. My copy got
lost when my server crashed and I didn't have a backup. Intel no
longer has it out on the support page Would it be possible for you to
get me a copy?
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TRSib Guest
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Posted: Thu Dec 11, 2008 2:09 pm Post subject: RE: Program will display Folder and sub-Folder Size |
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I just downloaded a utility called FolderSize-2.4 to use on my workstation.
It addess an extra field (after you right click the column bar and enable
Field Size) to your Windows Explorer window. I may give you a bit more detail.
I HAVE NOT TESTED IT ON WINDOWS SERVER.
You can do a search for FolderSize-2.4.msi and you should get a link for
download3k.com.
"WPD" wrote:
| Quote: | Hi
Thanks for the help.
"Steve Goddard" wrote:
Left Click on 'First' in the left pane from within windows explorer so it is
highlighted in blue. Then click on FILE from the command tools, select
PROPERTIES from the menu. It will display the overall size of 'First' and the
number of subfolders and files.
Or for a more powerfull tool open a command prompt and type "diruse /?"
(install W2K3 resource kit tools first) It will explain on how to use the
command to retrieve the information your looking for, easiest use is the
command followed by /s /m and the path.
"WPD" wrote:
Hi
If it does, I don't know how to make it work.
For example, if I have a folder name FIRST and if it has sub-folders named
TWO, THREE and FOUR directly under it and if each of these sub-folders has
both files and sub-folders under them, I can not select FIRSTin the Folders
column and have it tell me the the total size of FIRST and all of its
sub-folders in the Status Bar.
Please let me know if I am missing something.
****************************
"Steve Goddard" wrote:
Does the inbuilt Windows Explorer not achieve this? Diruse and other resource
kit tools can give you more narrowly defined info if required.
"WPD" wrote:
We have Windows Server 2003 with Service Pack 2, and all critical updates
have been installed. We want to add a program that will allow us to select a
folder, presumably in a File Manager-like view, and the size of the folder
and all of its sub-Folders will be displayed.
My prime consideration is that this program has a proven track record with
Windows Server 2003.
Thanks for the help. |
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Brad Baker Guest
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Posted: Thu Dec 11, 2008 4:08 pm Post subject: SNMP Trap Destination |
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I'm a little unsure if this is the best group to ask SNMP questions - if not
suggestions are welcome. (I couldn't find a group dedicated to SNMP
specifically)
I'm trying to configure the SNMP agent on several Windows 2000/2003/2008
systems. When I right click on the SNMP Service, and go to the "Traps" tab
there is some text which states the trap destinations may be host names, IP
addresses or IPX addresses.
By host names would those be NETBIOS host names or DNS host names or doesn't
it matter? I am trying to use a fully qualified DNS name (server.domain.net)
and it doesn't appear to be working. I used nslookup to confirm name
resolution does work properly for this dns name. So I am wondering if maybe
I shouldn't be using a DNS name or a fully qualified address?
I understand that using a DNS host name does have drawbacks (primarily if
DNS stops working SNMP does too) but on the other hand if I want to change
the IP address of the trap destination, I don't want to have to go through
and update the ip address on all our servers. If I use a DNS name I can
repoint the SNMP trap destination to a new IP by updating one DNS entry.
Anyway if someone knows the answer to this question please let me know. So
far googling hasn't revealed any answers.
Thanks
Brad
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Massimo Guest
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Posted: Fri Dec 12, 2008 6:03 pm Post subject: AD restore on different hardware [Was: Re: Completely restor |
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"Massimo" <barone@mclink.it> ha scritto nel messaggio
news:exwL%23YcWJHA.4284@TK2MSFTNGP02.phx.gbl...
| Quote: | I have an Active Directory forest (2003 functional level) composed of a
root domain and a child domain; each domain has two domain controllers,
and all the DCs are global catalogs.
I need to completely re-create this forest in a test lab, and I'm planning
on using backups and restores to do this; I have full system state backups
of every domain controller.
What is the restore process I should follow?
|
Today I tried restoring the system state of the first domain controller of
the root domain on one of the test lab's servers. It didn't work.
Problem: the system state brings with it all the original system's hardware
settings, so looks like it just doesn't like being restored on different
hardware. I got a BSOD complaining about INACCESSIBLE_BOOT_DEVICE, most
likely because the SCSI controller is definitely different between the two
systems (HP Smart Array on the original one, VMWare SCSI (disguised as LSI
Logic U320) on the destination one). It doesn't look like a HAL problem, as
the two systems have exactly the same HAL ("ACPI Multiprocessor PC").
As suggested here (http://support.microsoft.com/kb/263532/en-us), I launched
a repair install from a Windows 2003 R2 CD-ROM (the same version used on
both the original and destination systems), but it didn't work also: after
the text-mode setup, I got the same BSOD again.
The Question: I have a full system state backup of a Windows 2003 R2 domain
controller and I don't have its AD domain available (because this is a test
lab or a real disaster recovery scenario), how can I restore full DC
functionality to a server with the same OS but different hardware?
I can't do more tests until Monday, but I have a couple ideas to try:
- Run DCPROMO /ADV to restore only the AD database instead of the full
system state. But will this work if the original domain isn't available? I
think not, but please confirm.
- Use DSRM to do the same as above; but will this mode be available if the
server isn't a domain controller yet?
- Force the system to use the right SCSI controller driver. I tried, but it
looks like the actual system state restore is delayed until reboot: after
restoring and before rebooting, the system still has all the device drivers
it had before, so the restored hardware database clearly isn't in place yet;
this makes me unable to modify it with proper device drivers.
- I can mount the restored system's boot disk on another VM and access it
for file/Registry modifications, if needed; I tried this also, but the
WINDOWS\system32\config directory is full of $RestoredActiveFileXX things,
which I think make up the restored system state, copied on disk but still
not "active" (see above). I don't know what to do here, or if I can do
anything at all.
If you can help, please do :-)
Massimo
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Phillip Windell Guest
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Posted: Fri Dec 12, 2008 7:31 pm Post subject: Re: AD restore on different hardware [Was: Re: Completely re |
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I tried this once too.
Was never successful
But I thought about this although I didn't try it.
Create a new Server VM that can actually see the LAN and be fully functional
on it
Join it to the real domain
DC Promo it to a Domain Controller
When finished, give it time to fully replicate then shut down the VM.
Make a copy of the VM "hard drive file" and put it somewhere safe
Start up the VM and run DCPromo on the it to demote it down to a member
server, wait till replication stabilizes.
Move the VM from a Member Server to a Workgroup. Basically this is the same
thing as gracefully removing a DC from the domain. You can delete the VM at
this point.
Use the saved copy of the VM "hardrive" to create a new VM. Do **not* let
it see the LAN when it starts up. Have it seize all the FSMO Roles and go
through all the normal "cleanup" steps you would go through if a DC is
non-gracefully removed from a Domain. When finished you should have a
domain with a single DC holding all the Roles. But this is for a single
Forest/Domain only.
Your problem is going to be with having Child domains. You will have to do
a VM for each child Domain and the Root Domain at the *same time* so the VMs
won't be out of sync with each other. Make the backup copies and create new
VMs for each and start them up *together*,..but yet isolated from the *real*
LAN. Then do all the cleanup processes.
--
Phillip Windell
www.wandtv.com
The views expressed, are my own and not those of my employer, or Microsoft,
or anyone else associated with me, including my cats.
-----------------------------------------------------
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Phillip Windell Guest
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Posted: Fri Dec 12, 2008 7:41 pm Post subject: Re: AD restore on different hardware [Was: Re: Completely re |
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If there is an Exchange Server then you will have to wait untill the VM DCs
are all working correctly and "cleaned up". Then create a new Server VM
clean from scratch and then install Exchange on it and go throught the steps
you would go through if you had lost your real Exchange Server with out a
Full Backup.
I believe once Exchange is install the way it is suppposed to be you can use
actual "real" Backups of your Exchange Data Stores to "restore" them to the
new VM Exchange. It think because the VM Active Directory would have all
the Exchange material left over in it from the AD you mirrored it from the
Exchange installation should pick all that up as it is installed.
But,...like I said,..I haven't tried this,...it is just theory for me.
--
Phillip Windell
www.wandtv.com
The views expressed, are my own and not those of my employer, or Microsoft,
or anyone else associated with me, including my cats.
-----------------------------------------------------
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Massimo Guest
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Posted: Sat Dec 13, 2008 4:19 am Post subject: Re: AD restore on different hardware [Was: Re: Completely re |
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"Phillip Windell" <philwindell@hotmail.com> ha scritto nel messaggio
news:ut8ZTiJXJHA.4384@TK2MSFTNGP03.phx.gbl...
| Quote: | I tried this once too.
Was never successful
|
:-(
| Quote: | But I thought about this although I didn't try it.
|
It's a good strategy, and it's the one we'll probably use if restores don't
work.
But I find quite puzzling to not be able to restore a domain controller from
backup if I don't have identical hardware at hand...
Massimo
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Massimo Guest
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Posted: Sun Dec 14, 2008 11:20 am Post subject: Re: AD restore on different hardware [Was: Re: Completely re |
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No help here? :-(
Massimo
"Massimo" <barone@mclink.it> ha scritto nel messaggio
news:OsBKZxIXJHA.1184@TK2MSFTNGP05.phx.gbl...
| Quote: | I have an Active Directory forest (2003 functional level) composed of a
root domain and a child domain; each domain has two domain controllers,
and all the DCs are global catalogs.
I need to completely re-create this forest in a test lab, and I'm
planning on using backups and restores to do this; I have full system
state backups of every domain controller.
What is the restore process I should follow?
Today I tried restoring the system state of the first domain controller of
the root domain on one of the test lab's servers. It didn't work.
Problem: the system state brings with it all the original system's
hardware settings, so looks like it just doesn't like being restored on
different hardware. I got a BSOD complaining about
INACCESSIBLE_BOOT_DEVICE, most likely because the SCSI controller is
definitely different between the two systems (HP Smart Array on the
original one, VMWare SCSI (disguised as LSI Logic U320) on the destination
one). It doesn't look like a HAL problem, as the two systems have exactly
the same HAL ("ACPI Multiprocessor PC").
As suggested here (http://support.microsoft.com/kb/263532/en-us), I
launched a repair install from a Windows 2003 R2 CD-ROM (the same version
used on both the original and destination systems), but it didn't work
also: after the text-mode setup, I got the same BSOD again.
The Question: I have a full system state backup of a Windows 2003 R2
domain controller and I don't have its AD domain available (because this
is a test lab or a real disaster recovery scenario), how can I restore
full DC functionality to a server with the same OS but different hardware?
I can't do more tests until Monday, but I have a couple ideas to try:
- Run DCPROMO /ADV to restore only the AD database instead of the full
system state. But will this work if the original domain isn't available? I
think not, but please confirm.
- Use DSRM to do the same as above; but will this mode be available if the
server isn't a domain controller yet?
- Force the system to use the right SCSI controller driver. I tried, but
it looks like the actual system state restore is delayed until reboot:
after restoring and before rebooting, the system still has all the device
drivers it had before, so the restored hardware database clearly isn't in
place yet; this makes me unable to modify it with proper device drivers.
- I can mount the restored system's boot disk on another VM and access it
for file/Registry modifications, if needed; I tried this also, but the
WINDOWS\system32\config directory is full of $RestoredActiveFileXX things,
which I think make up the restored system state, copied on disk but still
not "active" (see above). I don't know what to do here, or if I can do
anything at all.
If you can help, please do :-)
Massimo
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Meinolf Weber [MVP-DS] Guest
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Posted: Sun Dec 14, 2008 4:44 pm Post subject: Re: AD restore on different hardware [Was: Re: Completely re |
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Hello Massimo,
See this one and read about why different hardware is a problem:
http://support.microsoft.com/kb/249694
Best regards
Meinolf Weber
Disclaimer: This posting is provided "AS IS" with no warranties, and confers
no rights.
** Please do NOT email, only reply to Newsgroups
** HELP us help YOU!!! http://www.blakjak.demon.co.uk/mul_crss.htm
| Quote: | No help here? :-(
Massimo
"Massimo" <barone@mclink.it> ha scritto nel messaggio
news:OsBKZxIXJHA.1184@TK2MSFTNGP05.phx.gbl...
I have an Active Directory forest (2003 functional level) composed
of a root domain and a child domain; each domain has two domain
controllers, and all the DCs are global catalogs.
I need to completely re-create this forest in a test lab, and I'm
planning on using backups and restores to do this; I have full
system state backups of every domain controller.
What is the restore process I should follow?
Today I tried restoring the system state of the first domain
controller of the root domain on one of the test lab's servers. It
didn't work.
Problem: the system state brings with it all the original system's
hardware settings, so looks like it just doesn't like being restored
on different hardware. I got a BSOD complaining about
INACCESSIBLE_BOOT_DEVICE, most likely because the SCSI controller is
definitely different between the two systems (HP Smart Array on the
original one, VMWare SCSI (disguised as LSI Logic U320) on the
destination one). It doesn't look like a HAL problem, as the two
systems have exactly the same HAL ("ACPI Multiprocessor PC").
As suggested here (http://support.microsoft.com/kb/263532/en-us), I
launched a repair install from a Windows 2003 R2 CD-ROM (the same
version used on both the original and destination systems), but it
didn't work also: after the text-mode setup, I got the same BSOD
again.
The Question: I have a full system state backup of a Windows 2003 R2
domain controller and I don't have its AD domain available (because
this is a test lab or a real disaster recovery scenario), how can I
restore full DC functionality to a server with the same OS but
different hardware?
I can't do more tests until Monday, but I have a couple ideas to try:
- Run DCPROMO /ADV to restore only the AD database instead of the
full
system state. But will this work if the original domain isn't
available? I
think not, but please confirm.
- Use DSRM to do the same as above; but will this mode be available
if the
server isn't a domain controller yet?
- Force the system to use the right SCSI controller driver. I tried,
but
it looks like the actual system state restore is delayed until
reboot:
after restoring and before rebooting, the system still has all the
device
drivers it had before, so the restored hardware database clearly
isn't in
place yet; this makes me unable to modify it with proper device
drivers.
- I can mount the restored system's boot disk on another VM and
access it
for file/Registry modifications, if needed; I tried this also, but
the
WINDOWS\system32\config directory is full of $RestoredActiveFileXX
things,
which I think make up the restored system state, copied on disk but
still
not "active" (see above). I don't know what to do here, or if I can
do
anything at all.
If you can help, please do :-)
Massimo
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Massimo Guest
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Posted: Sun Dec 14, 2008 4:56 pm Post subject: Re: AD restore on different hardware [Was: Re: Completely re |
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"Meinolf Weber [MVP-DS]" <meiweb(nospam)@gmx.de> ha scritto nel messaggio
news:ff16fb66108a58cb2c2ab5eaca2d@msnews.microsoft.com...
Hello Meinolf,
I know different hardware is a problem when restoring the system state; my
main question was: is there any way I can rebuild a domain controller
without restoring the full system state? Will DSRM and/or DCPROMO help me
here?
I also already tried repairing the Windows installation from the install
media; after the text-mode part of the setup, it crashed again with the same
blue screen.
Massimo
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Massimo Guest
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Posted: Sun Dec 14, 2008 5:23 pm Post subject: Re: AD restore on different hardware [Was: Re: Completely re |
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"Meinolf Weber [MVP-DS]" <meiweb(nospam)@gmx.de> ha scritto nel messaggio
news:ff16fb66108be8cb2c36d30d2bad@msnews.microsoft.com...
| Quote: | No, you can't restore without at least the system state. Make sure you
have more then one DC/GC and that replication works correct. So you have
allways the AD database available, FSMO roles you can seize if needed.
|
I'm testing a disaster recovery scenario here, so all I have are full
backups (including of course the system state) of the production DCs; so, if
I'm correctly understanding this issue, those backups are totally useless if
I don't have identical hardware to restore them on?
| Quote: | For a test domain i would add an additional DC/DNS/GC, let it replicate,
disconnect it from the domain and NEVER connect it back, seize the
FSMO roles and you have a full running copy from the production.
|
Yes, I know I can do that; I also could use VMWare Converter to create
virtual clones of my DCs.
But I'm really interested in the disaster recovery scenario, here.
Massimo
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Meinolf Weber [MVP-DS] Guest
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Posted: Sun Dec 14, 2008 6:10 pm Post subject: Re: AD restore on different hardware [Was: Re: Completely re |
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Hello Massimo,
No, you can't restore without at least the system state. Make sure you have
more then one DC/GC and that replication works correct. So you have allways
the AD database available, FSMO roles you can seize if needed.
For a test domain i would add an additional DC/DNS/GC, let it replicate,
disconnect it from the domain and NEVER connect it back, seize the FSMO roles
and you have a full running copy from the production. Any new policy/change
make also on the test domain.
Also see here:
http://blogs.dirteam.com/blogs/jorge/archive/2005/11/19/105.aspx
http://blogs.dirteam.com/blogs/jorge/archive/2005/11/19/107.aspx
Best regards
Meinolf Weber
Disclaimer: This posting is provided "AS IS" with no warranties, and confers
no rights.
** Please do NOT email, only reply to Newsgroups
** HELP us help YOU!!! http://www.blakjak.demon.co.uk/mul_crss.htm
| Quote: | "Meinolf Weber [MVP-DS]" <meiweb(nospam)@gmx.de> ha scritto nel
messaggio news:ff16fb66108a58cb2c2ab5eaca2d@msnews.microsoft.com...
Hello Massimo,
See this one and read about why different hardware is a problem:
http://support.microsoft.com/kb/249694
Hello Meinolf,
I know different hardware is a problem when restoring the system
state; my main question was: is there any way I can rebuild a domain
controller without restoring the full system state? Will DSRM and/or
DCPROMO help me here?
I also already tried repairing the Windows installation from the
install media; after the text-mode part of the setup, it crashed again
with the same blue screen.
Massimo
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Massimo Guest
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Posted: Sun Dec 14, 2008 6:16 pm Post subject: Re: AD restore on different hardware [Was: Re: Completely re |
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"Meinolf Weber [MVP-DS]" <meiweb(nospam)@gmx.de> ha scritto nel messaggio
news:ff16fb66108c78cb2c3a0692afbd@msnews.microsoft.com...
| Quote: | So it is not supported, but can work. Personally i made the same
experience like Philipp, always a blue screen.
|
That's ok.
But I really wish Microsoft would provide means of restoring Active
Directory that were not so dependent on the server's hardware. After all, AD
is "only" a database, and doesn't have any real dependency on physical
devices... if it could be backed up and restored without the need to include
it in a full system state backup, that would be a lot better.
Massimo
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Meinolf Weber [MVP-DS] Guest
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Posted: Sun Dec 14, 2008 6:33 pm Post subject: Re: AD restore on different hardware [Was: Re: Completely re |
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Hello Massimo,
As stated in the article:
You can restore a system state backup from one physical computer to the same
physical computer or another computer that has the same make, model, and
configuration (identical hardware).
Microsoft does not support restoring a system state backup from one computer
to a second computer of a different make, model, or hardware configuration.
Microsoft will only provide commercially reasonable efforts to support this
process. Even if the source and destination computers appear to be identical
makes and models, there may be driver, hardware, or firmware differences
between the source and destination computers.
So it is not supported, but can work. Personally i made the same experience
like Philipp, always a blue screen.
Best regards
Meinolf Weber
Disclaimer: This posting is provided "AS IS" with no warranties, and confers
no rights.
** Please do NOT email, only reply to Newsgroups
** HELP us help YOU!!! http://www.blakjak.demon.co.uk/mul_crss.htm
| Quote: | "Meinolf Weber [MVP-DS]" <meiweb(nospam)@gmx.de> ha scritto nel
messaggio news:ff16fb66108be8cb2c36d30d2bad@msnews.microsoft.com...
No, you can't restore without at least the system state. Make sure
you have more then one DC/GC and that replication works correct. So
you have allways the AD database available, FSMO roles you can seize
if needed.
I'm testing a disaster recovery scenario here, so all I have are full
backups (including of course the system state) of the production DCs;
so, if I'm correctly understanding this issue, those backups are
totally useless if I don't have identical hardware to restore them on?
For a test domain i would add an additional DC/DNS/GC, let it
replicate,
disconnect it from the domain and NEVER connect it back, seize the
FSMO roles and you have a full running copy from the production.
Yes, I know I can do that; I also could use VMWare Converter to create
virtual clones of my DCs.
But I'm really interested in the disaster recovery scenario, here.
Massimo
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mct@pioneerprogramming.co Guest
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Posted: Mon Dec 15, 2008 2:30 pm Post subject: Re: AD restore on different hardware [Was: Re: Completely re |
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"Massimo" wrote:
| Quote: | But I find quite puzzling to not be able to restore a domain controller from
backup if I don't have identical hardware at hand...
|
This right here is why Acronis can sell True Image with Universal Restore
for a thousand bucks per server.
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