Small Business Server 2003 to 2012 R2 Migration and Virtualized Domain Controller Questions
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@garak0410 said:
Getting a lot of these on the same file...is there a flag to skip this error or go to the next file? It will not proceed:
Access is denied.
Waiting 30 seconds... Retrying...It should skip after a few attempts. Do you have a lot of things open? Ideally you want everything turned off.
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@scottalanmiller said:
@garak0410 said:
Getting a lot of these on the same file...is there a flag to skip this error or go to the next file? It will not proceed:
Access is denied.
Waiting 30 seconds... Retrying...It should skip after a few attempts. Do you have a lot of things open? Ideally you want everything turned off.
Not at the moment...this is a sbscolsole.msc file and it tried at least 10 times before I canceled it...never moved off of it...
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@garak0410 said:
@scottalanmiller said:
@garak0410 said:
Getting a lot of these on the same file...is there a flag to skip this error or go to the next file? It will not proceed:
Access is denied.
Waiting 30 seconds... Retrying...It should skip after a few attempts. Do you have a lot of things open? Ideally you want everything turned off.
Not at the moment...this is a sbscolsole.msc file and it tried at least 10 times before I canceled it...never moved off of it...
This file and it's directory (called Admin) should not be open...I'd like to skip it but continue with copyall if I can.
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Add /r:1 to make it only try once.
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Add /zb so that you can start and restart the process.
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@scottalanmiller can robocopy copy files you don't have rights to?
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@Dashrender said:
@scottalanmiller can robocopy copy files you don't have rights to?
No, nothing can. Robocopy runs under your users. Presumably Robocopy would be being run by an admin for a system copy. If you aren't an admin, Robocopy is just another application, it can't circumvent system security. If it could, any tool could.
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I am an admin, but admins don't have rights to all files. There are reasons to have an admin's rights removed from a file. How would you migrate those files? take ownership?
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admins (plural) should not have rights
the singular administration account should have access to everything and its use logged.edit: seen your post. if that is already the case, then I would take ownership. but that could cause butt hurt or other ramifications if done without proper CYA
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@Dashrender said:
I am an admin, but admins don't have rights to all files. There are reasons to have an admin's rights removed from a file. How would you migrate those files? take ownership?
Admins do have rights, just not rights at all times. There is a difference between blocking and unblocking yourself and not having rights at all. The /b flag tells it to act like backup software. Obviously all backup software has to do the same thing - copy files to which it is not given explicit ownership and can only act as an administrator. So Robocopy just acts as backup software in that instance.
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@JaredBusch said:
admins (plural) should not have rights
the singular administration account should have access to everything and its use logged.edit: seen your post. if that is already the case, then I would take ownership. but that could cause butt hurt or other ramifications if done without proper CYA
We use multiple admin accounts. Big believer that it should always be plural. Never want to share account access.
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@scottalanmiller said:
@Dashrender said:
I am an admin, but admins don't have rights to all files. There are reasons to have an admin's rights removed from a file. How would you migrate those files? take ownership?
Admins do have rights, just not rights at all times. There is a difference between blocking and unblocking yourself and not having rights at all. The /b flag tells it to act like backup software. Obviously all backup software has to do the same thing - copy files to which it is not given explicit ownership and can only act as an administrator. So Robocopy just acts as backup software in that instance.
Perfect, I was hoping you'd say that. I knew the backup process could get around this, glad to know Robocopy can use it.
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This Robocopy command is working for me:
robocopy /mir /sec /copyall \oldserver\d$\ \newserver\e$\
I am running it now and it is working.
Question, if I run this again later, by default, will it only copy changed/new files from source?
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@garak0410 said:
This Robocopy command is working for me:
robocopy /mir /sec /copyall \oldserver\d$\ \newserver\e$\
I am running it now and it is working.
Question, if I run this again later, by default, will it only copy changed/new files from source?
No. You are thinking of Rsync
Remember I told you that you needed /zb that was for a reason. That's what allows for that.
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I know a lot of you have other suggestions beyond login scripts but I am sticking with them for now...but running into a drive mapping problem...
Question - Our main File Server Drive has a folder called ALL and then under that, various folders like Accounting, Purchasing, etc..
On the current server, you can map directly to one of those folders rather than having to do \server\All\Accounting
I am sure this is something I need to set at the root of the drive but cannot recall. Any suggestions?
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Did anyone mention DFS to you Garak?
During your transition period you could use DFS Replication to keep shares synced up between the two servers.
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@IRJ said:
Did anyone mention DFS to you Garak?
During your transition period you could use DFS Replication to keep shares synced up between the two servers.
Yes...it has been mentioned but my list has been too full to think of anything else...I'm a solo IT shop, so I am still handling workstation issues, office equipment issues, cell phones, software coding issues...juggling!
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@garak0410 said:
@IRJ said:
Did anyone mention DFS to you Garak?
During your transition period you could use DFS Replication to keep shares synced up between the two servers.
Yes...it has been mentioned but my list has been too full to think of anything else...I'm a solo IT shop, so I am still handling workstation issues, office equipment issues, cell phones, software coding issues...juggling!
That said...I am checking it out now...I may work late tonight...tomorrow is my official move to new servers evening...
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Do you feel one of these ways is better than the other, any if so, why?
e:\all\accounting = \servername\accounting
e:\all\it = \servername\it
e:\all\hr = \servername\hr
etcHere is the other option I mentioned above
e:\all = \servername\all
and you connect your drive letters like this
net use p: \servername\all\accounting
net use i: \servername\all\it
net use h: \servername\all\hr -
@Dashrender said:
Do you feel one of these ways is better than the other, any if so, why?
e:\all\accounting = \servername\accounting
e:\all\it = \servername\it
e:\all\hr = \servername\hr
etcHere is the other option I mentioned above
e:\all = \servername\all
and you connect your drive letters like this
net use p: \servername\all\accounting
net use i: \servername\all\it
net use h: \servername\all\hrThere are good times for each. The first set is based off of many shares and the later off of a single one. This really comes down to how you want to manage security. If you need granular share-level security you need many shares. But if you don't, and generally you don't, I would do the "one share" method to make things simpler.