ehhh... according to the KB article (http://support.microsoft.com/?id=312403) 
objects do age out..
 
<QUOTE>
It is not critical that you manually delete the Distributed Link Tracking 
objects after you stop the Distributed Link Tracking server service unless you 
have to reclaim the disk space that is being consumed by these objects as 
quickly as possible. Distributed Link Tracking clients prompt the Distributed 
Link Tracking server to update links every 30 days. The Distributed Link 
Tracking Server service scavenges objects that have not been updated in 90 
days. 
<QUOTE>
 
 
Jorge

________________________________

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] on behalf of joe
Sent: Mon 11/28/2005 10:10 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: RE: [ActiveDir] Disabling "Distributed Link Tracking Server" on domain 
Controllers


They don't age out. You need to delete them. MS cleans up very little in the 
directory automatically. Actually I was having an offlist conversation with one 
of my MS friends about this topic in regards to the previous FSP question. When 
deleting them it isn't too much impact, however, when they get purged out after 
the tombstone expires you may find your DCs chugging away if you have lots. I 
have seen hundreds of thousands of the filelinks in a directory before eating 
up tremendous space.
 
Personally I would hope the AD admins are doing a good job cleaning things up 
but for all practical purposes, most places aren't cleaning up and have no clue 
that they should be or that they need to be. The hard part, when SHOULD the 
system automatically delete something. It comes down it being able to identify 
without a shadow of a doubt that the object isn't needed (say computer objects, 
FSP, etc) or could be perfectly reconstituted if necessary in the event of a 
bad delete.
 
   joe

________________________________

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of AD
Sent: Monday, November 28, 2005 12:52 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: RE: [ActiveDir] Disabling "Distributed Link Tracking Server" on domain 
Controllers


Thanks for info the joe and Guido,
 
Because of our politics where I work, modifiying 40000 workstations is not that 
easy. Changing 20 DCs on the other hand is a walk in the park.
 
If I do not remove all of the filelinks manually, aren't they going to age out 
automatically after 60 days?
 
Thanks
 
Y

________________________________

From: Grillenmeier, Guido
Sent: Mon 28/11/2005 11:46 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: RE: [ActiveDir] Disabling "Distributed Link Tracking Server" on domain 
Controllers


nope, no known impact (unless you have specifically deployed an app that makes 
use of this service - none of the MS apps do, which is why the service is 
disabled by default in Win2003).
 
however, if you want to make sure, why don't you just reverse your disabling 
process: first disable all clients, then disable the service on the DCs.
 
Don't forget to cleanup the records underneath your domain's 
System\FileLinks\ObjectMoveTable and System\FileLinks\VolumeTable containers as 
these will surely contain a lot of garbage.
 
/Guido

________________________________

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of AD
Sent: Montag, 28. November 2005 17:40
To: [email protected]
Subject: [ActiveDir] Disabling "Distributed Link Tracking Server" on domain 
Controllers


As anyone found any issues in disabling the "distributed link tracking server" 
on windows 2000 server domain controllers? 
 
I would like to take a two step approach in disabling this useless service. 
First on the DCs and them on all workstations. I was just wondering if there 
would be an impact on the clients seeing that cannot communicate with the 
server.
 
Thanks
 
Yves 


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