Oops. No, you did not miss anything. I did.

Browsing to \\serverA\stuff\resources  or \\serverA\stuff\data fails; browsing to \\serverA\stuff\projects worked fine.

The update is that I rebuilt the root to no avail. I then restarted the server, and everything worked. My question now is why did it suddenly fail? That Event ID 3019 says “The redirector failed to determine the connection type.” While MS says you can ignore this error, it is all I have to go on.

nme

 


From: Steve Patrick [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, June 15, 2004 10:28 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [ActiveDir] DFS Replica Data Disappears

 

I am a little confused.. you said:

 

".. when a user browses to \\serverA\stuff\projects, she sees an empty folder...."

 

then:

 

.."Browsing to \\serverA\stuff\projects shows the correct files."

 

am I missing something here?

 

----- Original Message -----

From: Noah Eiger

Sent: Tuesday, June 15, 2004 5:21 PM

Subject: [ActiveDir] DFS Replica Data Disappears

 

Hi all –

I have a very simple DFS configuration: serverA contains the root (“stuff”) with a single subfolder containing data (“projects”); serverB contains two shares “data” (shared as “data$”) and “resources” (shared as “resources$”). The shares on serverB are links under “stuff” on serverA. So, if a user browses to \\serverA\stuff, she sees all three folders as if they were all on serverA.

Everything worked fine until (apparently) last Friday. Now, when a user browses to \\serverA\stuff\projects, she sees an empty folder. Same for data. Browsing to \\serverA\stuff\projects shows the correct files. Browsing to the shares on serverB directly shows the proper files.

All parts of the DFS root and links show green checks for status. I have rebuilt the links (though not the root) and restarted the service. The only thing that shows in the logs are MRxSmb (event 3019) which appear to be from trying to access the failed shares.

Any thoughts?

Thanks.

 

------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Noah M. Eiger

EIS Consulting for

PRBO Conservation Science

510-717-5742

[EMAIL PROTECTED]

 

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