This is certainly JUST my opinion – but if you have the TIME and the resources – I would say start clean buddy.

 

Create a brand new forest – one free from all previously existing problems/quirks/ghosts etc in the old forest --- create a transitive trust and move forward.

 

Just my 2 cents --- and I know not everyone would have the time - -let a lone the resources to go this route --- but in a perfect world --- that’s the road I would travel – so the whole network would be mine from the ground up.

 

-----Original Message-----
From: Patton, Jim [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Monday, October 07, 2002 12:01 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [ActiveDir] Domain Migration

 

I am currently work for a startup, (not a dot-bomb), that is in the process of becoming independent from our parent company. At this time, all IT-related resources are provided by our parent company. I would prefer to build a brand-new Active Directory infrastructure from the start. However, because of the current economic climate, I’ve had to develop some alternative plans.

 

Ultimately, the goal is to become fully independent with a completely separate IT infrastructure. I can envision three possible scenarios:

 

1) Create a new child domain within the existing infrastructure, create a new Exchange server and complete the migration all user accounts and data, transition the remaining IT-resources to the new child domain, (SQL 2000 & Sharepoint) and then eventually migrate the child domain to a new Active Directory Tree / Forest?

 

2) Create a new Tree and Domain within the existing Forest, migrate all IT-resources and then transition everything to a new Forest.

 

3) Create a new Active Directory Forest, establish a two-way trust between both Forests, and then begin the migration of IT-resources starting with the Exchange and other user-specific data.

 

Does anyone have any recommendations, suggestions or advice on the best path to take with the ultimate goal in mind?

 

Thanks

 

Jim

 

 

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